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Pamela LaVerne Jeans-Historian
to remember
Marine Maj Carmen Henderson, Jr. (CH/Mike).
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Date of Passing May 23, 2007
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Mr. C. H. (Mike) Lewis Jr., 85, of Hillsboro died Wednesday, May 23, 2007, at his residence. He was born October 28, 1921, in Shelbyville, Tennessee, son of the late Claude H. Sr. and Laviria Yancey Lewis. His father was a Baptist minister, and his mother was a schoolteacher. He was attending Middle Tennessee State Teachers College when the attack on Pearl Harbor ccurred. Major Lewis started his military career in naval flight training and was eventually assigned to the Marine Air Group. The next 21 years are history--flying corsairs, B-24 bombers and helicopters from the Pacific in World War II, to Korea, and finally Vietnam before retirement in 1963. He then went on to receive a Master's degree from Texas A & M at Kingsville and spent an additional 20 years teaching, ending his career as dean of the Marine Military Academy in Harleeh.
Upon his second retirement, he and his wife moved to the Hill Country, where he was a substitute teacher, member of a volunteer fire department and deacon at Rio Frio Baptist Church of Leakey. A member of First Baptist Church of Hillsboro, he was past master of San Benito Masonic Lodge #1064 and charter member of Al Amin Temple of the Shriners of Corpus Christi. He was also a member of National Sojourners, MMOA Foreign Wars, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Marine Corp League and Phi Delta Kappa. He had 50 years of service with Masons and Scottish Rite in Texas and Florida. He was also preceded in death by his wife of 63 years, Sylvia; and one daughter, Nancy Lewis Yudesis. Survivors include: two daughters, Ivel Sylvia Moore and Melissa Lewis Young and husband, David, all of Hillsboro; two sisters, Jayne Lewis Bernard of Memphis, Tennessee and Barbara Westlake of Pegram, Tennessee; son-in-law, Ben Yudesis of San Benito; seven grandchildren, Leigh Wilson and husband, Shaun, of Lafayette, Lou-isiana, Chris Moore and wife, Becky, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, Mike Moore and wife, Savanah, and Jim Moore and wife, Lisa, all of Oklahoma, Michele Tigelaar and husband, Brian, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, Deborah Lozano of Hillsboro and Larry Phillips and wife, Irene, of Mission; 12 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.
Korean War/Korean Summer (1953)
From Month/Year
May / 1953
To Month/Year
July / 1953
Description Korea, Summer 1953, 1 May - 27 July 1953. There was little activity anywhere along the front as 1953 began. Then, as spring approached, the enemy renewed his attacks against the Eighth Army 's outpost line. By July these attacks had increased in frequency and intensity until they were nearly as heavy as those of May 1951.
In January 1953 Van Fleet had twelve South Korean and eight U.N. divisions to defend the army front. Total strength of combat, service, and security troops was nearly 768,000. Opposing the U.N. forces were seven Chinese armies and two North Korean corps, totaling about 270, 000 troops. Another 531,000 Chinese and North Korean troops remained in reserve. With service and security forces, total enemy strength in Korea was estimated at more than a million men.
Other than a few patrol clashes, little fighting occurred during January and February 1953. On 11 February Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor took command of the Eighth Army as Van Fleet returned to the United States for retirement. The enemy increased his attacks during March, striking at outposts of the 2d and 7th Divisions and the 1st Marine Regiment. During the period 9-10 March the Chinese were successful in ambushing several U.N. patrols, inflicting heavy casualties in each instance. After these flare-ups the front quieted down until late May, when the enemy struck at the outposts of the U.S. 25th Division that were guarding the approaches to the Eighth Army's western positions. Although the enemy was successful in occupying three of the division outposts, he suffered nearly 3,200 casualties.
On the night of 10 June three Chinese divisions struck the ROK II Corps in the vicinity of Kumsong, attacking down both sides of the Pukhan River. Several attacks forced these units to withdraw about two miles. Both sides lost heavily; the Chinese suffered about 6,000 casualties and the ROK units about 7,400. By 18 June the attacks had subsided. By the end of the month, action along the entire front had returned to routine patrolling and light attacks.
Operation LITTLE SWITCH, an exchange of Allied and Communist sick and wounded prisoners, began on 20 April. When it was completed in the latter part of the month, 684 Allied prisoners had been exchanged for more than 6,000 Communists.
Armistice negotiations were resumed in April. The prisoner-of-war question was settled by providing each side an opportunity to persuade those captives who refused repatriation to their homeland to change their minds. By 18 June the terms of the armistice were all but complete; but on this date President Syngman Rhee ordered the release of 27,000 anti-Communist North Korean prisoners of war unilaterally, in protest against armistice terms which left Korea divided. U.N. officials disclaimed any responsibility for this action; but the enemy delegates denounced it as a serious breach of faith and delayed the final armistice agreement for another month. Enemy forces took advantage of this delay. On 13 July the Chinese launched a three-division attack against the left flank of the ROK II Corps and a one-division attack against the right flank of the U.S. IX Corps, forcing U.N. forces to withdraw about eight miles to positions below the Kumsong River. By 20 July, however, U.N. forces had counterattacked, retaken the high ground along the Kumsong River, and established a new main line of resistance. No attempt was made to restore the original line, as it was believed that the armistice would be signed at any time. Enemy casualties in July totaled about 72,000 men. Out of the five Chinese armies that had been identified in the attacks, the enemy had lost the equivalent of seven divisions.
By 19 July the negotiators at Panmunjom had reached an accord on all points. Details were worked out within a week and the Korean Armistice Agreement was signed at 1000 hours 27 July 1953.