 |
North
High School Wall of Honor
Joseph Elwood McDole
Class of June, 1950 |
 |
 |
Research done by Claradell Shedd,
class of 1953.
|
Joseph Elwood McDole |
Joe graduated
from North High in June, 1950. At the time, his next of kin was
Mrs. Dessa B. McDole, 1515 11th Street, Des Moines, IA. His service
number is 55217748. |
|
Joseph Elwood McDole |
 |
Year |
|
Rank |
|
Status |
 |
June, 1950 |
|
x |
x |
Graduated from North High,
Des Moines, IA |
1950-1951 |
|
Employed |
x |
Meredith Publishing Company, Des
Moines, IA |
Feb., 1951-
Dec., 1952 |
x |
School |
x |
San Francisco State, San
Francisco, CA; Then Iowa Highway Commission. |
Sept.24,
1952 |
x |
(Volunteer)
US Army |
x |
Drafted (volunteered)
into the US Army in Des Moines, IA |
Sept.,1952-
Dec.,1952 |
x |
Training |
x |
Basic Training at Fort
Riley, KS. 24th Infantry Division |
January, 1953 |
x |
Enroute |
x |
Fort Riley, KS to San Francisco,
CA. Then by transport ship *USNS William Weigel (T-AP-119) to
Yokohama, Japan (Camp Drake). |
February, 1953 |
x |
Stationed |
x |
Yokohama, Japan to Camp Fuji at the
base of Mount Fuji. Four months. 24th Infantry Division. |
June, 1953 |
|
Arrived |
x |
Pusan, Korea |
August, 1953 |
x |
Stationed |
x |
Inchon, Korea |
August, 1953 |
x |
Stationed |
x |
After Inchon, back to Pusan. Then
to **Koje-do, Korea to watch prisioners. We escorted the soliders
from India out of Korea. Then we went to Freedom Village, Yongdungpo,
Korea.. |
August, 1953 |
x |
Stationed |
x |
Freedom Village, Yongdungpo (45 miles
north of Seoul, Korea) guarding Chinese POW. There 10 months. |
1953 |
x |
Stationed |
x |
Freedom Village, Yongdungpo to Punch
Bowl Area, Korea.
Armistice was July 27, 1954. |
1953-1954 |
x |
Bronze Star/Cpl |
x |
At Punch Bowl, Korea, near North/South
Korean line. Awarded for service in Korea from April 1, 1953 through
July 27, 1954. During this time, Cpl Joseph McDole served as 1st
Battalion Operations Specialist and later as Regimental Range
NCO. 2nd Dagger Brigade. |
1954 |
x |
Enroute |
x |
Korea to Seattle, WA via troop ship. |
Aug.19, 1954 |
x |
Transfer to Reserve |
x |
Transferred to Army Reserve/Infantry. |
Sept., 1954 |
x |
Discharged/Sgt. |
x |
Flew from Seattle to Camp Carson,
CO. |
date |
x |
Enroute |
x |
Train from Camp Carson, CO to Des
Moines, IA |
1954-1956 |
x |
Employed |
x |
Meredith Publishing Company, Des
Moines, IA. Two years. |
1956-1995 |
x |
Employed |
x |
Electrician, Maintenance Supervisor
at L-tec Welding Supplies, Tonawanda, NY |
1995-2002 |
x |
Retired |
x |
In Tonawanda, NY |
2002 |
x |
Retired |
x |
Relocated to FL in 2002. |
|
*24th Infantry Divison
The 24th Infantry Division was initially activated in the Regular
Army at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, on 1 March 1921 as the Hawaiian
Division. Unlike most divisions in the continental United States, the
24th was concentrated on one post during the interwar years, which enabled
it to conduct more effective combined arms training. It was also manned
at higher levels than other divisions, and its field artillery was the
first to be motorized. With the threat of war in 1941, elements of the
Hawaiian Division were reorganized as the 24th and 25th Infantry Divisions,
and the Headquarters of the Hawaiian Division was redesignated as Headquarters,
24th Infantry Division.
Among the first divisions to see combat in World War
II, the 24th sustained minor casualties when the Japanese bombed Pearl
Harbor on 7 December 1941. The division was charged with the defense
of northern Oahu, where it built an elaborate system of coastal defenses.
In May 1943 the division was alerted for movement to Australia and by
September of that year, it had deployed to Camp Caves, near Rockhampton
on the eastern coast of Australia. The 24th was part of the assault
forces that landed on Dutch New Guinea, where it fought its way to the
Hollandia airfield. After occupation duty in the Hollandia area, the
division was among the assault forces on Leyte. From there the division
went to Luzon and eventually formed an element of the assault forces
in the Southern Philippines. During World War II the division adopted
its nickname, "Victory Division." After serving in five campaigns
and being decorated by the Philippine government, the 24th left Mindanao
on 15 October 1945 for occupation duty in Japan.
When the North Koreans attacked South Korea in June 1950, elements of
the 24th Infantry Division were the first to arrive in Korea, where
they fought a delaying action against overwhelming odds. The delay permitted
the United Nations to build up its forces near Pusan, and the division
was awarded the Presidential Citation (Army) for its actions. Over the
next nineteen months the division fought in seven campaigns and was
twice decorated by the Republic of Korea. In February 1952 the "Victory
Division" returned to Japan where it served as part of the Far
East reserve. In July 1953 the division went back to Korea to restore
order in prisoner of war camps. The following year the division returned
to Japan, where it served until February 1955. At that time the 24th
deployed to Korea for another tour of duty.
When the United States reduced and realigned its divisions in the Far
East in 1957, the 24th left Korea, eventually replacing the 11th Airborne
Division in Germany. While in Germany, in addition to its standard infantry
mission, the 24th fielded airborne units for about two years. The division
remained in Germany until 1969 when it redeployed to Fort Riley, Kansas,
as part of the REFORGER (Return of Forces to Germany) program. As the
Army withdrew from Vietnam and reduced its forces, the "Victory
Division" was inactivated in April 1970 at Fort Riley.
*USNS General William Weigel (T-AP-119)
Following a Magic Carpet voyage to Manila and back to San Francisco
11 April 1946, the transport departed San Francisco 16 April for New
York, arriving 1 May. Decommissioned there 10 May 1946, she was transferred
to the War Department for peacetime operations as an Army transport
and made shuttle runs with troops and supplies from San Francisco to
garrisons in the Pacific until reacquired by the Navy 20 July 1950.
General William Weigel was assigned to MSTS 1 August 1950, and redesignated
USNS General William Weigel (T-AP-119).
Korean War
During this phase of her career, the ship sailed from the Pacific coast
to Japan and Korea carrying troops for duty in the Korean War. She continued
to rotate American troops to strengthen the United Nations position
in Korea until she was placed in Reduced Operational Status in 1955.
General William Weigel was returned to the Maritime Commission
12 June 1958 and entered the National Defense Reserve Fleet at Olympia,
Washington.
Awards:
General William Weigel received seven battle stars for the Korean War
and one for the Vietnam War. |
 |
 |
Basic Training at
Fort Riley, KS;
USNS from Sam Francisco to Yokohama |
*USNS
General William Weigel (T-AP-119) |
|
 |
 |
(left)
Korea; 4/1/53-7/27/54
(left and above)
Day of being awarded the Bronze Star
(below right)
At Imjim River, South Korea |
**Koje-do Island - a
prison camp where over 170,000 communist and non-communist prisoners
were held from December 1950 until June 1952. Throughout 1951
and early 1952, upper-level communist agents infiltrated and conquered
much of Koje section-by-section by uniting fellow communists,
bending dissenters to their will through staged trials and public
executions, and exporting allegations of abuse to the international
community to benefit the communist negotiation team. In May 1952,
Chinese and North Korean prisoners at Koje Island rioted and took
Brigadier General Francis T. Dodd captive.
In 1952 the camp's administration was afraid that the prisoners
would riot and demonstrate on May Day (a day honoring Communism)
and so U.S. navy ships (such as the USS Gunston Hall (LSD-5))
removed 15,000 North Korean and Chinese prisoners from the island
and moved them to prison facilities at Ulsan and Cheju-do. |
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
Freedom
Village; Yongdungpo, Korea |
Laundry day; Pusan,
Korea; 1953 |
|

|
Joseph
Elwood McDole
Technical Sergeant
24th Infantry Div.; 34th Infantry Reg.;
1st Battalion, Company D
US Army

|


United Nations Service Medal/Korea; National Defense
Medal;
Korean War Service Medal; Bronze Star;
Korean Defense Service Medal; Good Conduct Medal;
Army Presidential Unit Citation |
|
|
09/18/10:
Living in FL. Died: 02/01/11. |
Music:
"Wind Beneath My Wings" |
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