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Cochran, Billy Glen
Army Corporal

Billy Glen Cochran, age 19, from Sharp County Arkansas.

Service era: Korea

Date of death: Monday, January 8, 1951
Death details: By mid-November 1950, U.S. and Allied forces had advanced to within approximately sixty miles of the Yalu River, the border between North Korea and China. On November 25, approximately 300,000 Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) “volunteers” suddenly and fiercely counterattacked after crossing the Yalu. The 2nd Infantry Division, located the farthest north of units at the Chongchon River, could not halt the CCF advance and was ordered to withdraw to defensive positions at Sunchon in the South Pyongan province of North Korea. As the division pulled back from Kunu-ri toward Sunchon, it conducted an intense rearguard action while fighting to break through well-defended roadblocks set up by CCF infiltrators. The withdrawal was not complete until December 1, and the 2nd Infantry Division suffered extremely heavy casualties in the process. Sergeant Billy Glen Cochran, who joined the U.S. Army from Arkansas, served with Battery D, 82nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery (Automatic Weapons Battalion), 2nd Infantry Division. He was captured on December 1, 1950, as his unit provided direct fire support to 2nd Infantry Division troops withdrawing from Kunu-ri to Sunchon, North Korea. He was marched to a holding camp in the Pukchin Tarigol Valley, where he died of exhaustion and pneumonia on January 8, 1951, while under the care of a captured Army doctor. Although he was buried near the camp, his remains were not identified among those returned to U.S. custody after the war. Sergeant Cochran is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. His name is also inscribed on the Korean War Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington, DC, which was updated in 2022 to include the names of the fallen.

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency

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