North Korean attack Following an initial penetration to the north, the retreating 34th Infantry moved south to
Nonsan. There, it was reinforced by troops from the
Republic of Korea Army (ROK). The KPA forces gathered on the west bank and assaulted the positions of the 1st Battalion's C and E companies, followed by a second landing against B Company. KPA forces pushed against the entire battalion, threatening to overwhelm it. The regimental commander ordered all support troops and officers to the line and they were able to repulse the assault. However, in the melee, KPA forces infiltrated their rear elements, attacking the reserve forces and blocking supply lines. Stretched thin, the 19th Infantry was unable to hold the line at the Kum River and simultaneously repel the KPA forces.
Roadblock KPA troops promptly set up a roadblock directly behind the 19th Infantry's line in its main route of supply along the road near the village of Tuman, just south of
Yusong on Taejon's western outskirts. The roadblock quickly became a serious problem for US forces trying to move ammunition and wounded to and from the Kum River line. Around 13:00 on July 16, the 19th Infantry regimental commander contacted Dean, who ordered him to break the roadblock. However, KPA troops had set up at least six machine-gun nests above the road at Tuman, and repeated attacks against it were unable to drive the KPA troops away. The roadblock was preventing evacuation of the wounded. Troops attempted to drive wounded in jeeps through the roadblock, but this exposed them to machine-gun fire. By 16:00 supply columns were also piling up at the block, unable to proceed as armor and airstrikes attempted to dislodge the KPA. Five hundred men from the regiment were gathered waiting to break the roadblock while heavy armor units from Taejon moved against it from the other side. During this time, US troops from the 19th Infantry, desperate to move around the roadblock to obtain supplies and care for the wounded, began moving through the surrounding hills. One tank was able to make it through the roadblock to evacuate the 19th Infantry's wounded commander, but by 19:00, commanders ordered the regiment to move its wounded along the ridges to the east of the roadblock.
Massacre At 21:00, about 100 men of the 19th Infantry moved into the hills to the east of the town. By the time they reached the top of the mountain, officers decided some of the seriously wounded could not be carried any further, as their carriers were exhausted. The regimental medical officer, Captain Linton J. Buttrey, and Chaplain Herman G. Felhoelter remained behind with the wounded, intending to move them when another group of troops came through who could carry them.
Death of Father Felhoelter Buttrey and Felhoelter were both unarmed, and wore the insignias of their respective vocations, indicating their non-combatant status. Soon, Buttrey and Felhoelter heard a KPA patrol approaching, a group of men from the KPA 3rd Division which had infiltrated the US lines. monument in
Arlington National Cemetery, where Felhoelter is memorialized The attack was witnessed from hills some distance away through binoculars by other members of the 19th Infantry. Felhoelter was awarded the
Distinguished Service Cross posthumously. Felhoelter became the first of several military chaplains to be killed in the Korean conflict. ;Felhoelter's background Father Herman Gilbert Felhoelter
OFM was born in
Louisville, Kentucky, in 1913. He joined the
Franciscans and was ordained for the
Friars Minor in 1939. He served as an Army chaplain in World War II and received a
Bronze Star for service under fire. After that war, Felhoelter became an assistant pastor in
Cincinnati, but was recommissioned in 1948 and appointed chaplain to the US 19th Infantry and posted to Korea. Four days before his death, he had written his mother: "Don't worry, Mother. God's will be done. I feel so good to know the power of your prayers accompanying me ... I am happy in the thought that I can help some souls who need help." == Aftermath ==