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PFC Sterling Geary, Jr., U.S. Army, served with B ("Baker")
Company, 35th Infantry Regiment, 25th ("Tropic Lightning") Infantry Division.
He was captured during combat on November 27, 1950 and a repatriated Prisoner-of-War
(POW) reported that he had died while in enemy hands in March 1951. His
body has never been recovered. He is part of Field Search.
By mid-November 1950, the combined American, Republic of Korea,
and United Nation forces had reached the high-water mark of their counter-offense
against the North Koreans. They collectively drove the enemy from South Korea, and
then the American and U.N. forces followed their ROK allies in their drive north of
the 38th Parallel in an effort to reunite the two Koreas. As the allied forces raced
northward towards the Yalu River, more than 180,000 "volunteers" from the Chinese Army
were sneaking south into the North Korean hills. They were hiding in preparation of a
massive surprise attack against the allied forces. The CCF finally received that order
to attack the allies on November 25th. All night, and night after night for the next
to weeks, the CCF attacked, overwhelmed, and displaced allied units along a 60-mile
front.
When the CCF onslaught began, PFC Geary and the other
members of the 35th Regiment were astride the Unsan-Pakch'on road, just
south of the town of Unsan and west of the Kuryong River. They were among
the northern most units of the 8th Army. They didn't know that they were
just miles away from a concentration of 90,000 soldiers of the Communist
Chinese Force. They were attacked that night by an entire Chinese division.
After putting up a vigorous defense during which they killed more than
375 Chinese soldiers, they succeeded in driving the CCF division back
into the hills. Elsewhere, other CCF attacks were much more successful.
The communist delivered severe blows to the other regiments in the 24th,
25th, and 27th divisions, forcing them to retreat. The Division Commander,
General Kean, was compelled to order all three regiments to withdraw.
It is always difficult to withdraw in the face of a strong enemy, but
it is nearly impossible to successfully withdraw in the face of an enemy
force that controls the surrounding countryside, which significantly outnumbers
the retreating force. Yet that is what the brave men of the 25th Division
did. They had begun a grinding series of desperate fighting retreats.
This involved attacking their way southward during daytime, stopping at
dusk to establish makeshift defensive positions, launching brief but sharp
attacks on communist positions to blunt impending Chinese night attacks,
fighting all night long to ward of the Chinese attacks. When the morning
came, another fight to withdraw southward would begin.
So on that evening, the men of B Company
were hastily holding their defensive positions in the village of
Tong-Dong. At nightfall, the CCF attacked the 25th company position
from two-sides. After heavy fighting the CCF successfully infiltrated
the American positions. At that point, the surviving Americans
had to retreat to other positions in the village of Tong-Dong.
They could only hold that new position briefly before the CCF
attacks forced the remainder of B Company to retreat even further
southward. The night fighting had been brutal, and B Company lost
58 men which were either killed or captured. PFC Geary was one of those
captured.
Unfortunately, as deadly as the fighting
withdraw had been, the American POW's were in for even a harder,
and more deadly ordeal. The CCF weren't prepared to handle,
nor were they concerned about the welfare of the men they captured.
They quickly marched the POW's northward. During the march,
the POW's began to feel the effects of Chinese mistreatment.
They received little bits of food every 48 hours, but no water.
Many men drank rice-paddy water to slake their thirst. From
this, those men contracted dysentery and cholera as a result.
The POW's were marched from 8:00 p.m., until 4:00 a.m., over
rolling hills. Many hills had crested over 1,000 ft. high,
and temperatures that were 20 - 30 degrees below 0. During
the day, they were crammed (up to 22 men per 7' by 7' rooms)
into unheated, windowless Korean homes. There, men had to
take shifts to simply sit down. At times, they were held in
temporary holding camps (many of which named "Death Valley"
by the men). Over time PFC Geary and some of the other survivors
of the deadly marches were taken to a "permanent" POW camp in the
North Korean village of Pyoktong that was called Camp 5. That camp
was located on the southern bank of the Yalu River. The difficulties
of the marches were only partially ameliorated at the "permanent"
POW camps. The food was not much better, and the care was still primitive.
Unfortunately, by the time PFC Geary and many of his comrades
reached the camp, they were suffering from malnutrition and various
other illnesses. It was at Camp 5 where PFC Geary died in late March
1951 from malnutrition. He was buried in a cemetery across a
creek from the camp.
In an effort to recover all
missing U.S. servicemen, DPMO has negotiated with
the government of North Korea for access to crash
sites, battlefields, and prison camp cemeteries.
To this date, we have never gained access to the
POW camp cemeteries. DPMO and the Central Identification
Laboratory-Hawaii's (CIL-HI) excavations in northwest
North Korea and from 1996 through 2000 have resulted
in the recovery and repatriation of remains of over
120 U.S. servicemen. That effort still continues to
this day. The North Koreans have also authorized
limited access to their main military museum and
national library in Pyongyang for POW/MIA-related research.
U.S. researchers have not located information on PFC Geary
during these archival research visits from 1997-1999.
We continue to actively seek information about the loss of
PFC Geary and will forward new discoveries to family members
through the U.S. Army Casualty Office.
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