314th delivers road to U.S. Marine Corps Published April 24, 2009 By By Mr. Christopher Rumley 314th Airlift Wing Historian LITTLE ROCK AIR FORCE BASE, Ark. -- In November 1950, as the US Army's Tenth Corps and 1st Marine Division pushed north to the Yalu River in Korea, their commanders believed the war would soon be over. Eating that years Thanksgiving meal along a tiny mountain road in the northern portion of Korea, the troops were determined to be home by Christmas. Little did they know this tiny section of mountain road would soon become infamous. In many locations bridges spanning deep drop-offs cut across the precariously narrow road. Heading up the route, enemy opposition had been light and morale was high. All that changed on the night of November 26th when 120,000 Chinese regular troops attacked the X Corps. The following night, two Chinese divisions attacked the 1st Marines and cut off their supply route to the south. The now trapped Marines immediately called upon Combat Cargo Command to airdrop ammunition and supplies to units trapped near the Chosin Reservoir. The stage was set for one of the most remarkable achievements in American military history - the resupply and evacuation of the X Corps. On November 29th, 12 C-119s from the 314th Troop Carrier Group began delivering supplies to the Marine division. General William H.Tunner of Combat Cargo Command offered to fly the entire marine division and most of the small vehicles out from Hagaru-ri, a small town at the southern tip of the reservoir. Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Smith, commander of the 1st Marine Division appreciated the offer, "Thanks," he said, "I'll need the whole fighting division to get everybody out - there are hundreds of our men up ahead too. But you take the sick, frost bitten and wounded." Pilots and C-47 crews flew out 4,689 casualties from Hagaru-ri in six days. Among the casualties were many Chinese regulars with frozen hands and feet who had crawled into the Marine perimeter to surrender and seek respite from the freezing temperatures. With the wounded safely removed, General Smith could now fight his way down the narrow path, and he would be taking his heavy equipment with him. The procession of 10,000 Marines and 1,000 vehicles took 38 hours to maneuver their way down the 11 mile mountain path from Hagaru-ri to Koto-Ri. Four miles outside of Koto-Ri they reached a dead end. The Chinese had destroyed a bridge traversing a 1,500 foot gorge in the Funchilin Pass. There was no way around the 16 foot gap. It was at this point that General Smith made an unusual request to Combat Cargo Command that eight sections of Treadway Bridge and plywood planking be dropped to his forces. If the bridge was blown out...General Smith would build his own. The Treadway Bridge sections were each 16 feet long and weighed 2,900 pounds. A practice run before the actual drop, using 24-foot parachutes, destroyed a bridge section, burying it six feet into the ground. With no time for further testing, larger 48-foot chutes were brought in for the drop. On Dec 7th, eight planes from the 314th TCG, loaded with one bridge section each, took off from Yonpo and flew toward Koto-Ri. The planes decreased altitude to 800 feet in the mountain terrain and dropped the sections onto an unmarked drop zone. One section was destroyed on impact and one fell into enemy hands. Six of the sections; however, landed intact on the drop zone. Needing only four sections to complete the bridge, the Marines were in business. On the morning of December 8, thanks to the only airdropped bridge in history, the Marines broke out of Koto-Ri and were soon out of harm's way. "There can be no doubt," General Smith acknowledged, "that the supplies received by this method proved to be the margin necessary to sustain adequately the operations of the division during this period." The 314th TCG provided the replacements, weapons, ammunition, water, food, and medical supplies needed to sustain the Marines for 13 days and allowed them to fight their way out of the trap. When the Marines were cut off at Koto-Ri, the 314th dropped them a road. By the end of December, all of the X corps had been evacuated from its foray into the Northern sections of Korea. For its actions during the campaign, the 314th earned a Distinguished Unit Citation - the first such combat award earned by any Air Force unit in the Korean War. Coincidently, one of the Marines with the 1st Division at Chosin who benefitted from the 314 TCG drops, was a 2nd Lieutenant Joseph Mordente of Item ( I ) Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine (Regiment). The regiment was hit hard during the break-out, as reflected by its 9 Medal of Honor recipients from Nov. 2 to Dec. 4, 1950. In one of those strange twists of fate that are familiar to history, his son, Colonel Patrick Mordente is the current commander of the 314th Troop Carrier Group (now named 314th Operations Group).