Marine Supply in Korea
            By Kenneth W. Condit 
            Historical Division Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps 
            Reprinted from the January 1953 issue of The Marine Corps Gazette 
            Reprinted with permission to The Korean War Educator. 
             
            It is a truism that an army travels on its stomach. While this has been recognized from the earliest days 
            of warfare, the complexity of modern war has so expanded an army’s stomach that it requires a much richer 
            and more varied diet. As a result, logistics and strategy have become inseparable, and military leaders have 
            learned that no strategic plan is stronger than its logistical support. 
            Hitler discovered the validity of this concept when his armies in Russia were caught by winter weather 
            for which they were unprepared. To bring the lesson closer home, the 1st Marine Division on Guadalcanal was 
            nearly lost for lack of logistic support. Dependent upon an inadequate base 500 miles away and with 
            communications severed by the enemy much of the time, the Marines were frequently so short of supply that 
            the fate of the operation hung in the balance. 
            The Marine Corps, as well as the other American armed services, learned this lesson of World War II well. 
            When the Korean crisis broke, they had well formulated logistical plans, highly developed skills, and the 
            nucleus of an effective organization. Logistics was a major problem for the Marine Corps from the outset. In 
            its solution the Marines have demonstrated versatility and adaptability to a great variety of conditions. 
            Not only have they performed their specialty, amphibious warfare, they have also participated in a mountain 
            campaign in the dead of winter. In both operations, shortage of Army service units imposed an additional 
            burden on the Marines. Not only did they have to support their own troops, but also furnish service units to 
            perform duties normally carried out by Corps troops. 
            In all these situations, the rigors of the Korean campaign have demanded constant improvisation and 
            adaptability. Every means of transport has been employed. Marines have used their familiar LVTs, DUKWs, and 
            trucks. They have also tried their hands at railroading and air transport. And on some occasions, they have 
            had to rely upon the most primitive form of transportation the human back. 
            For the Marines, the Korean War began on 2 July when the Joint Chiefs of Staff granted Gen MacArthur’s 
            request for a Marine RCT with its own air. By 13 July, these forces, organized as the 1st Provisional Marine 
            Brigade, had started to embark. Nine days later, MacArthur’s request for a war-strength Marine division was 
            granted, and the work of preparing the 1st Marine Division for movement overseas was begun. Logistic 
            problems in this movement were considerable. According to Marine Corps doctrine, all units were to have on 
            hand a full initial allowance of supplies and equipment, and service units were to stock thirty days of 
            replenishment supplies based on war time rates of expenditure. But these replenishment stocks, based on 
            peacetime tables of organization, were pretty well depleted by the brigade, leaving slim pickings for the 
            division units. 
            Issue of equipment to division units and the accumulation of thirty-day replenishment stocks was a 
            formidable task, particularly as the outloading was to begin on 10 August. Further to complicate the 
            logistical task, the destination and mission of the division were in doubt. It was not known whether the 
            Marines would land in Japan or go direct to Korea. Nor did the division staff know whether they were to 
            prepare for an assault or administrative landing. With these issues still in doubt, the task of equipping 
            the division began. 
            As troops poured in to Camp Pendleton, they were issued individual equipment when necessary from the Post 
            Supply Depot. Units arriving from the 2d Division at Camp Lejeune to be incorporated in the 1st Division 
            sent their equipment, except for vehicles, to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, to be sorted. 
            Tanks, trucks, and other heavy equipment were sent to Naval Station, San Diego. Shortages of motor 
            transport, signal, and engineer equipment were made good from stocks in moth balls at the Barstow annex of 
            the San Francisco Depot of Supplies. 
            Loading of ammunition began on 8 August, and of other supplies two days later. To avoid congesting the 
            streets of downtown San Diego, loading was done in two increments. A total of forty-five days supply of 
            rations, thirty days of fuel, and five units of fire were mounted out, and by the 18th ships were ready to 
            sail. 
            While the 1st Marine Division convoy was at sea, an advance planning group from the division staff flew 
            to Tokyo to begin planning for the employment of the Marines in Korea. At the outset, the Army agreed to 
            furnish resupply of all items common to both Army and Marine Corps. The Corps would have to furnish for 
            themselves those items used only by Marines. To process this material, a supply regulating detachment was 
            established in Japan. 
            The immediate mission for the 1st Marine Division was to act as the landing force of the Army’s X Corps 
            in an operation designed to take the Korean port of Inchon by amphibious assault, and then to push inland 
            and seize the former South Korean capitol, Seoul. The effect of this landing in the enemy rear would be to 
            cut his communications, forcing a withdrawal to avoid the destruction of his forces. At the same time, 
            Eighth Army was to break out of the Pusan Perimeter to the south and push north to link up with X Corps. 
            The Inchon landing presented a serious logistical problem. Because of the extreme tidal range, landing 
            craft could only reach the beach at high tide. Assault elements would be isolated after landing until the 
            next high tide. To supply these troops during the interval, eight LSTs loaded with fifty tons of ammunition, 
            thirty tons of food, fifteen tons of water, and five tons of fuel were to land right behind the assault 
            waves. 
            Other problems confronting logistics planners concerned the build up of supply across the beach, opening 
            of the port of Inchon at the earliest possible moment, and the orderly distribution of supply to front line 
            units. To meet these problems, a logistical task organization was formed under the Commanding Officer of the 
            Army 2d Engineer Special Brigade. In addition to the engineer brigade, it included the Marine 1st Shore 
            Party Battalion, 1st Combat Srevice Group, and 7th Motor Transport Battalion. 
            At war strength an engineer special brigade is set up to give logistical support to a three-division 
            corps in amphibious assault and to operate a port for a force of the same size. But, owing to a serious 
            shortage of Army port and amphibious service units in the Far East, it was necessary to employ Marines for 
            some of these tasks. 
            The logistic plan called for the 1st Shore Party Bn to supervise unloading across the beaches at first, 
            with the 1st Combat Service Group attached to operate beach dumps. The 2d Engineer Special Brigade was to 
            take over control of all shore party activities upon order of the CG of the 1st Marine Division, and also to 
            open and operate the port. The 1st Shore Party Battalion was to continue to unload cargo over the beach 
            control of the engineer brigade, while the 1st Combat Service Group was to set up consolidated supply dumps 
            in the port area. 
            The 7th Motor Transport Battalion had been attached to the 1st Marine Division to give it the extra 
            transport needed for extended land warfare, but X Corps was so short of motor transport that the battalion 
            was employed at corps level throughout the operation. 
            While planning was in progress, ships carrying the 1st Marine Division began to arrive in Kobe, Japan. As 
            these ships had been commercially loaded in San Diego, cargo had to be reloaded for assault. To reach the 
            target on time, LSTs would have to sail by 10 September and transports by the 12th. This sailing date left 
            so little time that it was decided to combat load only the assault units. The others would go 
            organizationally loaded. So rapidly had the ships been loaded on the West Coast that much of the ammunition, 
            rations, and fuel had been distributed throughout the incoming shipping and had to be reassembled before it 
            could be loaded into assault shipping. 
            To add to the problems, a typhoon struck Kobe on 3 September. Waves washed over cargo-laden piers, 
            drowning out vehicles. Ships broke loose and drifted across the harbor. Miraculously, only one was damaged 
            so badly it had to be put in dry dock. 
            In spite of these difficulties, loading was completed on time. Marine units carried five units of fire 
            and thirty days supply of all other items. An additional five units of fire was loaded aboard one ship as 
            corps reserve. 
            The vessels carrying the 1st Marine Division navigated the treacherous approaches to Inchon and arrived 
            off the port in the early morning hours of 15 September. At 0630, the 3d Bn, 5th Marines landed on Green 
            Beach on the island of Wolmi-do. Very little resistance was encountered, and the Marines quickly overran 
            this island guarding the approaches to the port of Inchon. Supply operations in support of the landing were 
            carried out by a team from the 1st Shore Party Bn. Owing to the difficulty of navigating the treacherous 
            approaches in darkness, the larger transports carrying heavy cargo-handling equipment did not arrive in time 
            to unload this machinery for use during the assault phase. Shore party personnel were forced to manhandle 
            cargo across the beach. Unloading was further handicapped by extensive mud flats which hampered the beaching 
            of landing craft, and by lack of dump space ashore. 
            The main landing on Red and Blue Beaches on the mainland was executed on the next high tide, twelve hours 
            later. Assault units of the 5th and 1st Marines were ashore on schedule and moved rapidly inland against 
            only sporadic resistance. On the heels of the assault troops of the 5th Marines, men of the 1st Shore Party 
            Bn landed on Red Beach with the eight LSTs loaded with high priority supplies. By working throughout the 
            night the 1st Shore Party Bn was able to unload these ships in time for them to retract on the morning tide. 
            Personnel of the 1st Combat Service Group set up beach dumps for temporary storage of the supplies as they 
            were landed and issued them to combat units. 
            On Blue Beach, the 1st Marines was supported by a smaller contingent of the 1st Shore Party Bn. As this 
            beach was only to be used for the initial assault, no supply build-up was to be made. In addition to 
            supplies in the hands of the assault troops, additional stocks were loaded in LVTs, but in the confusion of 
            the landing they went to the wrong beach and were stranded on the mud flats by the receding tide. Resistance 
            to the landing was so light that these supplies were not needed until the next morning. 
            The morning of D+1 found all the beaches organized and operating according to plan. Personnel from the 
            1st Combat Service Group located sites for consolidated supply dumps in the port area and began to build up 
            the stocks for issue to service units. Stocks in the beach dumps were depleted by issue to troops and by 
            transfer to the consolidated dumps. The 1st Service Battalion landed and opened a ration and fuel dump for 
            issue to combat units of the 1st Marine Division. 
            Unloading continued over Red Beach, but it soon became apparent that this beach did not have the capacity 
            to support the operations ashore. Strong currents, great tide range, and treacherous mud flats combined with 
            inexperienced civilian crews on LSTs prevented an adequate flow of supplies. A hasty change of plan was made 
            to increase LST beaching facilities on Green Beach. With the movement of the 1st Marines inland, Blue Beach 
            was closed, permitting the transfer of shore party personnel to Green Beach to handle the additional 
            unloading. 
            On 17 September, D+2, the 2d Engineer Special Brigade assumed control of all logistical operations in the 
            Inchon port area. The 1st Shore Party Bn was relieved of duties on Red Beach to devote all its energies to 
            unloading operations at Green Beach. The 1st Combat Service Group continued to operate consolidated dumps. 
            This organization was the storage agency for all X Corps supplies in the port except for ammunition and 
            engineer supplies, handled by Army units. 
            Motor transport was so short that the 7th Motor Transport Bn, originally intended to support the 1st 
            Marine Division, was held in the port area under control of the engineer brigade. Of a total of 205 trucks 
            available for port operations, 168 were Marine, 132 from the 7th Motor Transport Bn, and thirty-six from the 
            1st Combat Service Group. 
            A partial remedy for the shortage of motor transport was the employment of rail transportation. Although 
            plans did not call for railroad operations to begin until D+30, the 2d Engineer Special Brigade rounded up 
            Korean train and track crews in Inchon and began the work of repairing the Inchon-Seoul line immediately 
            after landing. By the evening of D+1, a switch engine and six cars were operating in the Inchon area. On 
            D+4, the first train, carrying 1200 Marines, was dispatched over a distance of about five miles. The first 
            Marine supply train made the complete run from Inchon to Yongdong-po, a suburb of Seoul, on 26 September. 
            During the Inchon-Seoul operation, a total of 350,000 rations, 315,000 gallons of fuel, 1,260 tons of 
            ammunition, and 10,000 troops were moved by rail. 
            While these logistical agencies were unloading and storing supplies in the Inchon area, the 1st Marine 
            Division service units were operating forward dumps of ammunition, rations, and fuel. The 1st Service Bn 
            opened the ration and fuel dump on 16 September, and the 1st Ordnance Bn opened the ammunition dump a day 
            later. Both dumps were displaced forward frequently to keep up with the rapidly advancing combat troops. 
            By 19 September, the 5th Marines had reached the south bank of the Han. To assist the crossing the 
            following morning, the 1st Shore Party Bn was detached from the 2d Engineer Special Brigade and reverted to 
            1st Marine Division control. The battalion established a ferry and also trans-shipped some cargo from tracks 
            to LVTs and DUKWs for the crossing. A second ferry was established further upstream near Seoul to support 
            the crossing of the 1st Marines. To facilitate the resupply of troops operating north of the river, the 1st 
            Service Bn and the 1st Ordnance Bn set up supply dumps for the issue of rations, fuel, and ammunition on the 
            north bank at both ferry sites. 
            On 21 September, X Corps assumed control of operations ashore. At the same time, the Inchon Base Command 
            took over control of logistics in the port area. The 2d Engineer Special Brigade was attached to the base 
            command, and the 1st Combat Service Group was detached from the engineer brigade and attached directly to 
            the Inchon Base Command. 
            Combat troops of the 1st Marine Division reached the approaches of Seoul on the same day. After a rapid 
            and lightly opposed advance, the Marines now met heavy resistance from a determined enemy barricaded in the 
            city. It took six days of heavy fighting and two more of mopping up to secure the city and its environs, but 
            by the 29th enemy resistance had collapsed. Eight days later, Eighth Army troops, who had broken out of the 
            Pusan Perimeter on 16 September relieved X Corps in the Inchon-Seoul area. But the end of the Inchon-Seoul 
            operation offered no respite for the Marines. Already new operations were in the planning stage. 
            With the defeat and retreat of the North Korean forces beyond the 38th parallel, Gen. MacArthur prepared 
            to pursue the defeated enemy, complete mopping up the remnants of the NK army, and occupy all Korea to the 
            Yalu River. X Corps, including the 1st Marine Division, was to make an amphibious landing at the east coast 
            port of Wonsan, then strike west across the peninsula and link up with Eighth Army in a gigantic pincer 
            movement. 
            Logistical planners on X Corps staff were faced with the same shortage of Army service units that had 
            plagued the Inchon operation. For the operation in northeast Korea, there were to be two beachheads, one at 
            Suwon for the 7th Infantry Division, and another at Wonsan for the remainder of X Corps. The 2d Engineer 
            Special Brigade was to operate the Suwon beachhead, leaving the 1st Combat Service Group and the 1st Shore 
            Party Bn to operate the beachhead and port at Wonsan. 
            Loading out from Inchon presented some serious problems. Facilities at the port were so limited that all 
            unloading of incoming shipping was to cease while outloading was in progress. It was impossible to stop 
            unloading completely because supplies for the Wonsan operation were still coming in. Even with unloading 
            reduced to a trickle, Inchon could not handle the outloading of the entire Corps, and the 7th Infantry 
            Division had to be sent by truck to Pusan for that purpose. Again, as at Inchon, the time was critically 
            short. To reach the target area by a D-Day of 20 October, the LSTs would have to sail by the 15th and other 
            shipping by the 16th, only eight days after loading began. So short was the time that only assault elements 
            could be combat-loaded. Others went as an organizational load. 
            To support a rapid advance inland, each RCT was provided with sixteen trucks and trailers carrying an 
            additional one-half unit of fire, six trucks loaded with rations, and eight with fuel. In addition, three 
            truck companies were to be loaded with ammunition proportioned to meet the needs of an RCT, and were to be 
            ready to establish an RCT ammunition dump. 
            The convoy carrying the 1st Maine Division sailed from Inchon on schedule and prepared to land troops at 
            Wonsan on 25 October. But Wonsan had fallen on the 10th to rapidly advancing ROK troops. At the same time, 
            Eighth Army troops on the western side of the peninsula smashed the remnants of the North Korean Army and 
            entered Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, on the 19th. These events necessitated a change of plan for X 
            Corps. It was decided to make an administrative landing at Wonsan, then to push on to the Manchurian border, 
            mopping up the last remnants of North Korean forces and occupying the country. 
            For the 1st Combat Service Group and the 1st Shore Party Bn, the decision to make an administrative 
            landing did not call for a change of plan. Supplies still had to be unloaded across the beach and stored in 
            dumps for issue to division service units. The task of opening and operating the port would be no less 
            difficult because troops did not land in assault formation. 
            On the night of 25 October, unloading was started. The 1st Shore Party Bn had to overcome offshore sand 
            bars and areas of deep sand between the water’s edge and solid ground. But in spite of these difficulties, 
            unloading went steadily forward, and by the 31st the 1st Marine Division had been unloaded. The 1st Combat 
            Service Group, which came ashore on the 26th, set to work to establish supply dumps and to clear the port 
            for unloading operations. By 2 November this task was completed, and ships began to unload at the docks. 
            Unloading of other X Corps units kept the 1st Combat Service Group and the 1st Shore Party Bn busy while the 
            remainder of the 1st Marine Division pushed on to the north into the mountains towards the Chosin Reservoir. 
            The 7th Marines, first Marine unit to move into the Chosin Reservoir area, encountered a Chinese 
            Communist division near Sudong on 4 November. The four-day battle which followed was a forecast of events to 
            come, when the Chinese arrived in the area in force. The encounter with a new enemy served to emphasize what 
            might become a serious logistic problem. Advance elements of the division were already 108 miles from their 
            base of supply at Wonsan, and every step the Marines took into the mountains served to stretch an already 
            tenuous supply line. 
            A partial remedy to the problem was to move the division dumps to Hamhung. This move was carried out by 
            the 1st Service and 1st Ordnance Bns on 4 November. Supplies could now be brought forward by X Corps over 
            the sixty-nine miles of rail from Wonsan. From Hamhung to the 7th Marines position at Sudong was thirty 
            miles over narrow, twisting roads. As this regiment and other division units pushed on further north, they 
            would encounter a precipitous rise through the Funchillin Pass to the Chosin Reservoir. 
            To facilitate the supply of these units, the 1st Service Bn put into service the narrow gauge Chosin 
            branch of the Shinko railroad. The Korean manager rounded up crews to operate the line. On 6 November the 
            first train pulled out of Hamhung in an effort to reach the 7th Marines but blocked tunnels prevented the 
            trip and not until three days later did a train reach Sudong. By 11 November the rail line was clear all the 
            way to the bottom of the Funchillin Pass at Chinhung-ni. From this point trains had once been lifted by a 
            cable to the top, but destruction of the power facilities made it impossible to run the cable. Chinhung-ni 
            became the site of a division railhead with dumps for rations, fuels and ammunition. Stocks of supplies 
            sufficient to furnish rations and fuel for two RCTs for three days and two units of fire for two RCTs were 
            maintained here. 
            During the increasingly colder November days, the 1st Marine Division moved cautiously ahead. By the 
            15th, the 7th Marines was in Hagaru at the foot of the Chosin Reservoir and the other infantry regiments 
            were soon to follow. On the 19th, supply dumps for rations, fuel, and ammunition were opened at Hagaru. To 
            handle supply problems at Hagaru a supply regulating station was set up under command of the Commanding 
            Officer, 1st Service Bn. 
            While these steps were being taken to strengthen the supply facilities for the division in the Reservoir 
            area, installations in the rear area were tightened up. The 1st Combat Service Group, having completed the 
            unloading of X Corps troops at Wonsan, moved to the port of Hungnam to set up in-transit depots for the 
            corps. Its job was to break down incoming cargo into the proper classifications and forward it to dumps in 
            the Hamhung area. Employing from 2,000 to 2,500 Korean laborers a day, the group moved as much as 6,000 tons 
            of cargo in a twenty-four hour period. 
            On 24 November, Gen MacArthur issued new orders to X Corps and Eighth Army calling for a general 
            offensive to end the war. While Eighth Army continued to advance to the north on the western side of the 
            Korean peninsula, X Corps, with the 1st Marine Division as the spearhead, was to attack west to link up with 
            Eighth army in a massive envelopment. To direct the new attack, a division command group moved forward to 
            Hagaru, with the assistant G-4 included to direct logistic operations. 
            The 7th Marines attacked west on the 24th, reaching Yudam-ni two days later. The 5th Marines moved up 
            behind the 7th on 27 November, prepared to pass through and continue the attack to the west. Meanwhile, the 
            1st Marines stationed a single battalion at Hagaru, Koto-ri, and Chinhung-ni to guard the line of 
            communications to the coast. 
            On the advice of the Commanding Officer, 7th Marines, it was decided to build up Yudam-ni as an 
            intermediate supply base. Three days rations had just been delivered, and a resupply of ammunition was 
            loaded on trucks, ready for delivery on the 28th. This convoy never got through, for on the night of the 
            27th, the Chinese struck in great force, and the Marine strong points were soon cut off. 
            In spite of the efforts of the 1st Marine Division to build up supply levels in the Reservoir area, it 
            was obvious that the beleaguered Marines could not fight their way out without resupply. Troop units at 
            Yudam-ni and Hagaru had two days supply of rations and fuel. At Hagaru and Yudam-ni there were additional 
            stocks in dumps for seven and three days respectively. The ammunition picture was not so bright. There was 
            one half unit of fire in the hands of troops at both Hagaru and Yudam-ni, but only one unit of fire had been 
            stockpiled at Hagaru. The failure of the ammunition convoy to get through meant that there was no supply at 
            Yudam-ni except what was in the hands of the units. 
            All efforts to re-open the line of communications failed, leaving the Marines in the Reservoir area 
            totally dependent n air drop for resupply. The Combat Cargo Command of Far East Air Forces stepped into the 
            breach, making supply of X Corps troops in the Reservoir area the first priority mission. The Group’s C-47s 
            and C-119s and a few attached Marine R4Ds flew in the needed ammunition, food, fuel, and miscellaneous items 
            of equipment to keep the Marines fighting. Supplies were packaged and prepared for dropping by the Marine 
            1st Air Delivery Platoon, operating from Yonpo, or by the Combat Cargo Command in Japan. 
            After three days of bitter fighting, the 1st Marine Division began to withdraw towards the coast. 
            According to plan, the movement was to be made in three stages. First the 5th and 7th Marines were to fight 
            their way back to Hagaru. After a pause for rest and reorganization, the withdrawal was to continue in two 
            further stages to Koto-ri, then to Chinhung-ni. At this point, Army troops were to make contact and assist 
            in the journey to the sea. Thus, the Marines were to pull back from one strong point to another, never 
            having to move more than fourteen miles in one hop. 
            While the 5th and 7th Marines were fighting their way back to Hagaru, the division began to build up 
            supply levels there to provide for the next leg of the journey. Owing to poor communications, it was 
            impossible to receive accurate requisitions from the 5th and 7th Marines, so their requirements had to be 
            estimated. Rations and ammunition sufficient to carry the Marines to Koto-ri were flown in. Fuel supplies 
            were built up for the journey all the way to Chinhung-ni. At the same time, stocks were built up at Koto-ri 
            to provide resupply for the Marines when they reached that point. 
            Estimates proved to be accurate in all categories except fuel. Frequent halts of the column and the 
            necessity to keep engines running so they would not freeze, exhausted the supply by the time the column 
            reached Koto-ri. Fortunately, “on call” air drop loads had been prepared to meet such a contingency, and the 
            necessary gasoline was dropped at Koto-ri. 
            By 11 December, the 1st Marine Division had arrived in Hamhung completing its withdrawal from the Chosin 
            Reservoir. During these twelve days a total of 119,630 “C” rations, 37,710 gallons of gasoline, 3,552,940 
            rounds of small arms ammunition, 58,862 mortar rounds, and 9,620 105mm rounds were requested for delivery by 
            air. Of these, division supply personnel calculated that about seventy to eighty percent of the rations were 
            received and usable and seventy percent of the gasoline. Ninety percent of the small arms and mortar 
            ammunition requested could be used. Attempts to drop artillery ammunition were not so successful. A 
            combination of inaccurate drops and rounds damaged on landing reduced the usable ammunition to about 
            twenty-five percent of that requested. 
            Marine service units ended the northeast Korea operation as they started it—by loading the division 
            aboard ships for redeployment to another theater of the war. As early as 6 December, Gen. MacArthur had 
            decided to abandon northeast Korea, and to concentrate all forces under Eighth army. Marine units moved 
            directly from temporary quarters at Hamhung to the port of Hungnam for embarkation. The first units went 
            aboard ship on the 12th, and on 15 December, two months after their departure from Inchon, the 1st Marine 
            Division sailed from Hungnam for South Korea.  |