

The National Guard was first organized in Tompkinsville in 1948, when members of the
Kentucky Lions Club and other organizations helped start it with approximately 25 men,
including many who were veterans of World War II. The first man was enlisted in July
1948, and the unit was federally recognized in October 1948 as Battery C, 198th Field
Artillery. In November, the unit was redesignated Battery A, 623rd Field Artillery
Battalion. Battery A served in the Korean War.
Battery A, 623rd Field Artillery Battalion was ordered into federal service on January
23,1951 at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, and ordered to foreign duty with the United
Nations Forces in Korea. They left the United States from San Francisco on December
4, 1951. The unit participated in four campaigns during the Korean War and received
the Korean Presidential Unit Citation and the U.S. Navy Unit Commendation. Battery A
was split into two separate groups during the Korean conflict. One of these sections
was deactivated in March of 1955 while the other was deactivated in 1952. In January
of 1953 the unit was reactivated and used the MVSB as their armory. The unit was
reorganized several times between 1953 and 1968, but has been designated Battery A,
1/623rd Field Artillery since May 1969. Battery A was most recently activated for
Desert Storm, where they supported elements of the 18th Airborne Corps during the ground
offensive. The Guard also served with the 7th Corps and were part of the 196th Field
Artillery Brigade. The entire 1/623rd Field Artillery Battalion served in Desert Storm.
On December 5, 1990, the unit was alerted to prepare for activation for Operation Desert
Storm. The Mobilization Advance Party, consisting mainly of officers was called to report
on December 6, with the remaining members of the Guard reporting on December 7. On December
9 the unit was officially activated. On the tenth of December, the unit left Tompkinsville
for Fort Campbell, where they began processing for deployment to Saudi Arabia. On the way
to Fort Campbell, the unit stopped in Glasgow for a going-away party. The unit had three
days off in December to spend with their families, and on December 26, they began loading
up their equipment and vehicles to leave for Saudi Arabia. Before the unit left
Tompkinsville for the war, a wedding took place at the armory. On May 6, 1991, the men
returned from Desert Storm and were greeted with a Homecoming Parade in downtown
Tompkinsville. A barbeque was held for the men at Old Mulkey Meeting House State Park,
sponsored by the Family Support Group. In all, the 1/623rd had approximately 455 men
participate in Desert Storm. There were no casualties in the entire battalion.
Besides overseas duty, the National Guard in Tompkinsville has participated in many state
active duty missions, including active duty in a Letcher County labor dispute, assisting
the Kentucky State Police in maintaining order from April 24 to May 2, 1959. The unit was
also called for state active duty in Louisville from May 28-June 3, 1968, where they
helped the Kentucky State Police in maintaining order during racial disturbances. More
recent state active duty missions include flood duty in Smithland, Kentucky (Livingston
County) in 1997, and guard duty during the Kentucky Derby.
In addition to state active duties, the Guard has participated in many community activities,
including color guards in Christmas parades in Tompkinsville, Burkesville, and Edmonton,
the Watermelon Festival, Veterans Day festivities in Monroe County, the Barbeque Festival
at Fountain Run, Kentucky, and Riverboat Days in Burkesville. The Tompkinsville high
school used rooms in the armory for classrooms, and the gym was used for home basketball
games until 1962. Prior to the current armory and the MVSB, the National Guard met in a
rented commercial building located at 602 Magnolia Street. The MVSB was completed in 1950
and served as a combination motor storage building and armory until the current armory
was completed in 1960. Construction began on the new armory in September 1959 and it was
completed and dedicated on August 12, 1960. Although not eligible at this time, in
approximately ten years, if the armory still maintains most of its original materials
(especially the wooden floor), it will be eligible for the National Register.
In Korea, The Shooting 623rd Became Master Bunker
Builders
by: Colonel Arthur L. Kelly, USA (Ret)
On Sunday morning June 25, 1950, Kentuckians had their regularly scheduled radio program interrupted
for a newsbreak. The commentator announced that the Communist North Korean Army had invaded South
Korea. Following the United Nations (UN) decision to resist aggression and the imminent defeat of
the poorly equipped and badly battered South Korean Army, Task Force Smith, an Infantry Battalion
(plus) from the US 24th Infantry Division, was sent in from Japan to delay the enemy. As other
forces were being scraped together and rushed in, Task Force Smith was quickly overrun near Osan by
the North Korean army equipped with Russian tanks. Suffering heavy causalities, as the other forces
were thrown in by piece meal commitment, General Walker hung on desperately by delaying actions and
bought enough time to establish the hard pressed Pusan Perimeter. Kentuckians remembering Bataan
rightly worried about their sons being driven into the sea. However, by Sept 15, 1950, General
Macarthur, against the advise of everyone, made his famous and great turning maneuver by landing an
Amphibious Force at Inchon. Following the Pusan Perimeter break-out and link-up with the Amphibious
Forces, and following the nationally heated debate on how to limit the war,
Macarthur sent General
Walker’s 8th Army and Gen. Almond’s separate X (10th) Corps on a rapid pursuit of the enemy. The UN
forces were so widely scattered that by the time some units reached the Northern boundary of North
Korea and over-looked the Yalu River, China had infiltrated Army Groups between the UN Forces.
On November 25, 1950, the Chinese Red Armies surprised and attacked the UN Forces in mass and while
inflicting heavy casualties sent the UN forces reeling southward to a defensive line south of Seoul.
By July 1951 after both sides alternated between the defense and offense mostly just north of Seoul,
the lines stabilized generally just north of the 38th Parallel. Then for the next year and a half
the war became a war of position, similar to the trench warfare of WWI. While bitter negotiations
continued at Kaesong and Panmunjom, the front lines became bunkered in with connecting and fighting
trenches. Both sides then conducted limited offensive actions known as, The Battles For The Hills
until the war ended July 27, 1953. That was the condition in Korea Dec. 23, 1951, when the 623rd
Field Artillery Battalion arrived with its eighteen 155 MM Howitzers. The 623rd was Kentucky’s only
National Guard unit to serve in Korea. The Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, A, B, C, and Service
Batteries were from; Glasgow, Tompkinsville, Campbellsville, Monticello, and Springfield.
For a while in their first position in the Mungdung-ni valley all the artillery was what the troops
called outgoing. Nevertheless, Lieutenant Fred Rankin, C Battery’s executive officer from Monticello,
insisted on the troops building live-in bunkers. In June 1952 when the valley received in coming
intense enemy artillery fire, the protection provided by the bunkers rewarded the troops for their
hard labor. Logs were dragged out of the mountains with the howitzers prime-movers. The logs on
top of the bunkers were covered with two or three layers of sand bags plus three feet of dirt. Later
when the rainy season came that bunker was swept off the hill in a landslide. Fortunately, the bunker
popped and cracked before it collapsed allowing the occupants time to scramble out. While this that
position, the Kentuckians underwent a cultural shock when they learned that they'd be included in
The Army’s decision to integrate its units. Soon black and white soldiers; worked, ate, played, and
laughed together; used the same facilities; slept in the same bunkers; and became friends. Integration
in the 623rd went well.
When the 623rd moved in July 1952 to its second position in Smoke Valley near the Punch Bowl, the
bunkers were positioned to avoid a land side. That was an unusual position. Headquarters and the
three firing batteries were tightly clustered. Smoke generators operated in front of the units during
daylight hours to block enemy observation of the battalion. Incoming artillery fires were received
in Smoke Valley. By the time the 623rd moved to its third position north of Seoul and south of
Panmunjom in October 1952, the Batteries had become skilled bunker builders. When a Lieutenant, from
Missouri, in B Battery was killed by incoming rounds shortly after the Battalion arrived at the 3rd
position, Lieutenant Arthur L. Kelly, Battery A’s new executive officer, from Springfield Kentucky took
a convoy of trucks and went on a scrounging mission to get materials to build bunkers. Despite being
lectured or proper supply procedures at some supply depots, Lieutenant Kelly returned with his trucks
loaded to the brim with heavy and light building materials. He traded a load of lumber to the nearest
Marine Artillery unit for the use of their bulldozer. In less than a week, Battery A was living in the
finest bunkers in Korea. As word spread around about the quality of the bunkers men from other units
far and wide came to see them.
Battery A had nine bunkers 12 feet by 24 feet and one odd shaped bunker for the Fire direction
center (the nerve center of the Battery). There was one bunker behind each of the six howitzers for
the gun crews (12 men), two for the Headquarters section and one for the Officers. Over the bunker’s
roofs and one leg of the L shaped entrances were 2 layers of sand bags filed with dirt one foot of
loose dirt, layers of rocks, to stop enemy artillery rounds with a delayed fuse, and then more dirt.
Unlike the other two sets of bunkers these bunkers were water proofed and drained with a plumping
system made out of empty powder canisters gotten from a neighboring 8-inch artillery unit. This
third set of bunkers were ventilated, dry, lighted with electricity, and comfortable. There was
no mildew, snakes, or rats in these bunkers.
The 623rd Field Artillery Battalion became a premier artillery battalion in Korea. Its National
Guard officers had been commissioned in a variety of branches and many of them had seen combat
in WWII. This gave the Battalion a breadth of military and leadership skills. However, their
artillery training while in the National Guard from 1947 to January 1951 had been limited. However,
following their entry on active duty, January 23, 1951, the officers were sent from Fort Bragg, on
a rotational basis, to Fort Sill Oklahoma for their artillery schooling. This coupled with intense
training at Fort Bragg gave them a depth of artillery skills. The Non-Commissioned Officers were the
best. Many were WWII veterans. The Artillery Group S-1 (personnel officer) at Fort Bragg said that
he had never seen so many men from one battalion qualified for officer’s candidate school. The filler
personnel (about 35%) were draftees mostly from Wisconsin, Ohio, and Indiana. They were a fine group
of young men. With this mixture of personnel and firing artillery missions often both day and night
in Korea, the units soon became so proficient, that watching the crews in action was like watching
a well-oiled machine.
Following a mission fired by Battery C while located in the Mungdung-ni valley, the Corps Artillery
Aerial Observer drove several miles from the airfield to congratulate the men for a job well done.
He told them that he had never seen any unit fire as fast and as accurate as they had just done.
Later Lieutenant General Palmer, the X Corps Commander visited the unit in the same location to
congratulate them for having scored the highest score of all the Corps Artillery units on the
recently administered Battery Test. When the Marines came under heavy attack in October 1952 in
the area known as the Hook, the 623rd answered their calls for artillery support. After the
bloody battle, the Marines said it was the best artillery support that they had ever seen. For
its outstanding fire support while in General Support of the Marines and two Korean Divisions, The
623rd FA BN was awarded the Navy unit commendation medal and the Republic of Korea Unit citation medal.
Battery A 1st Battalion 623rd Field Artillery created and maintained by George Stewart