Kimball Jr., Hunter Hudson
Army 1st lieutenant
Hunter Hudson Kimball Jr. from Mississippi, Harrison county.
Service era: Korea
Date of death: Sunday, July 16, 1950
Death details: On the evening of July 15, 1950, the U.S. Army’s 19th Infantry Regiment held defensive positions along the south bank of the Kum River. As dusk approached, North Korean People’s Army (NKPA) tanks appeared on the opposite shore and began firing on the U.S. positions. Although U.S. troops repulsed the attacks that evening, the next morning the NKPA crossed the river and launched a major attack against the 19th Regiment. As the regiment began withdrawing south to Taejon, the North Koreans pushed deep into their defensive lines and set up a roadblock en route to Taejon. When retreating American convoys could not break through the roadblock, soldiers were forced to leave the road and attempt to make their way in small groups across the countryside. Of the 900 soldiers in the 19th Infantry when the Battle of Kum River started, only 434 made it to friendly lines. First Lieutenant Hunter Hudson Kimball Jr. entered the U.S. Army from Mississippi and served with Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 19th Infantry Regiment, 24th Infantry Division. He was serving as a liaison officer with his unit when he was wounded on July 16, 1950, during the Battle of Kum River, while attempting to withdraw around an enemy roadblock outside Taejon. Following the war, a soldier reported he last saw 1LT Kimball badly wounded and taking cover from the enemy in a rice paddy near a roadblock. This was the last known sighting of First Lieutenant Kimball. He was never reported as a prisoner of war and remains unaccounted for. Today, First Lieutenant Kimball is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.
Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency
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