3rd Ranger Company assaulting a Chinese defensive position. The Rangers excelled in lightning attacks against the enemy. When the war of movement ceased and the defensive lines hardened, Ranger effectiveness was greatly reduced.

A Highly Praised Luxury

The Ranger Infantry Companies in Korea, 1950-1951

By Kenneth Finlayson

From Veritas, Vol. 6, No. 2, 2010

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The history of the U.S. Army Ranger Infantry (Airborne) companies was brief, lasting only from August 1950 to October 1951. A total of fourteen companies were activated at Fort Benning, Georgia, with six seeing combat in Korea. Intended to attack targets deep behind enemy lines in the way the North Korean Army employed guerrilla units in the early days of the war, the Ranger companies did not have the impact intended by Army Chief of Staff General (GEN) J. Lawton Collins, when he directed their formation in August 1950.1 A variety of factors; the changing battlefield environment, the mis-employment of the companies, and resistance in the Army to the Ranger concept, mitigated against their success. Despite being a short-lived experiment, the legacy of the Airborne Ranger companies is today’s U.S. Army Ranger School, whose Program of Instruction (POI) evolved from the original six-week Ranger company collective training. The Ranger companies are also an integral part of the lineage of today’s 75th Ranger Regiment.

Men of the 3rd Ranger Infantry Company in combat in Korea.
Men of the 3rd Ranger Infantry Company in combat in Korea.

When the first three Ranger companies arrived in Korea in December 1950, the battlefield was fluid, featuring considerable movement by both sides. Three months before, the Allies broke out of the Pusan Perimeter after GEN Douglas A. MacArthur’s successful surprise landing behind North Korean lines at Inch’on. The North Korean People’s Army (NKPA) retreated north, pushed by the U.S. and Republic of Korea Army (ROK) forces. The situation was ideal for behind-the-lines raids, the Rangers’ specialty. The classic examples are the airborne insertion of the 2nd and 4th Ranger Companies with the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team (ARCT) at Munsan-ni in March 1951, and the 4th Company’s small boat assault on the Hwachon Dam the next month. However, before the Ranger Companies reached Korea, the opportunities to conduct these types of missions were fading. When Communist Chinese Forces (CCF) entered the war in strength in November 1950, the prospects for the Rangers diminished as the battle lines gradually hardened along the 38th Parallel. By June 1951, GEN Matthew B. Ridgway, the Commander-in-Chief of UN forces in Korea, realized that the period of effectively employing Ranger companies had passed.2 To gauge the Ranger’s utility across the command, Ridgway queried his subordinate commanders in the spring of 1951 on their effectiveness. The responses were mixed. While the Rangers were generally held in high regard by the units to which they were attached, the concept did not get strong support.

Major General (MG) Clark L. Ruffner, 2nd Infantry Division, commended the 1st Ranger Company: “The unit’s performance has been outstanding.3 MG Claude B. Ferenbaugh, his fellow 7th Infantry Division Commander, was equally impressed with the 2nd Ranger Company. “On every occasion, they were highly praised.4 Ferenbaugh recommended that Ranger battalions be formed and attached to each division.5 These two infantry divisions had the longest association with Ranger companies. The 25th Infantry Division Commander, MG William B. Kean, believed the 5th Rangers “have proven their value to this division.6 Overall, however, these positive comments did not outweigh the negative reports from the majority of Corps and Division commanders.

3rd Ranger Company assaulting a Chinese defensive position. The Rangers excelled in lightning attacks against the enemy. When the war of movement ceased and the defensive lines hardened, Ranger effectiveness was greatly reduced.
3rd Ranger Company assaulting a Chinese defensive position. The Rangers excelled in lightning attacks against the enemy. When the war of movement ceased and the defensive lines hardened, Ranger effectiveness was greatly reduced.

Lieutenant General (LTG) Frank W. Milburn, I Corps, led the opposition to the concept. He recommended: “American Ranger Companies not be employed in Korea,” based on inadequate intelligence and the lack of suitable targets for Ranger missions. Milburn cited difficulty in planning airborne insertions by his divisions. Furthermore, obvious racial differences with Orientals made Rangers easy to detect when operating in rear areas.7 MG William M. Hoge, IX Corps, cited Ranger limitations in their inability to operate independently without support for sustained periods. He noted unit strength reduced their use in special operations missions. Hoge decried the “creaming” of the infantry divisions of select non-commissioned officer volunteers which deprived units of high quality corporals and sergeants.8 This was a common complaint as was the inability by infantry divisions to insert the Rangers deep enough behind enemy lines to be effective.9

The new 25th ID commander, Brigadier General (BG) J. Sladen Bradley, did not share MG Kean’s high opinion of the Rangers: “This company has been employed on what was considered to be proper Ranger missions [by the Division staff] without profitable results and has been a luxury rather than a useful unit. Ranger Company missions do not normally present themselves in the immediate front of the division. Profitable Ranger targets which develop at a greater depth in front of a division are too deep in this mountainous terrain to allow for the commitment of a company size Ranger organization.10 GEN Ridgway blocked the use of the Rangers against deep battle targets based on the inhumane treatment of prisoners by the NKPA.11

The general consensus was that sending and supporting the Ranger companies deep inside enemy territory was beyond the capability of the divisions. The Ranger units were too small for sustained operations. To avoid being totally negative about the Army Chief of Staff’s “pet project,” most commanders did a quick sidestep and advocated Ranger battalions attached at Corps or Army level as they were in World War II.12 Based on his findings being reinforced by the field commanders, Ridgway requested permission from GEN Collins to inactivate the Ranger companies in-theater. It was approved by the Army on 2 June 1951.13 The majority of the Rangers in Korea were reassigned to the 187th ARCT. The remainder were dispersed among the U.S. divisions in theater based on their accumulated combat points.14 Ranger deactivations in Korea led to the elimination of the Army’s eight remaining Ranger companies on 11 October 1951.15

Students at the Ranger School go through a rigorous program of physical training, including frequent use of the notorious “Darby Queen” obstacle course.
Students at the Ranger School go through a rigorous program of physical training, including frequent use of the notorious “Darby Queen” obstacle course.

With an armistice pending in Korea, the recommendation to form Ranger battalions got little interest in Washington. However, the Army Staff recognized the value of the Ranger training program. LTG Edward H. Brooks, Second U.S. Army spoke up: “We’d have a better combat Army if all the men were graduates of the [Ranger] course.16 This led GEN J. Lawton Collins to direct that: “Ranger Training be extended to all combat units of the Army in order to develop the capability of carrying out Ranger-type missions in all Infantry units in the Army.17 The Ranger Training Center at the U.S. Army Infantry School was converted into the Ranger Department in 1952.18

Twenty years later, GEN Creighton W. Abrams Jr. resurrected Ranger battalions in the Army. In July 1974, the 1st Battalion, (Ranger) 75th Infantry was activated, followed shortly by the 2nd Battalion, (Ranger) 75th Infantry in October. It took another ten years for the Army to expand the Ranger battalion capability. In October 1984, the 3rd Battalion, (Ranger) 75th Infantry was formed and the need for a Ranger Command and Control headquarters was approved in February 1986.19 Thus between 1951 and 1974, Army Ranger School graduates inculcated these tactics and techniques throughout the Army, as they continue to do today.20 Born out of necessity in the early days of the Korean War, the collective training of the Ranger companies led to the development of the world’s premier light infantry training and leadership course, the Army Ranger School.

Rangers of the 75th Ranger Regiment on patrol in Iraq. Today’s Army Rangers are the finest light infantry in the world.
Rangers of the 75th Ranger Regiment on patrol in Iraq. Today’s Army Rangers are the finest light infantry in the world.

ENDNOTES

  1. Department of the Army, Memorandum for the A.C. of S., G-3 (Operations), Subject: Organization of Marauder Companies, 29 August 1950, National Archives, Record Group 95, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  2. Commander-in-Chief, Far East Command, Memorandum to Chief of Staff, 1 June 1951, Subject: Ranger Companies, USASOC History Office Classified Files, Fort Bragg, NC. [return]
  3. EUSA Report, 1 February 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  4. EUSA Report, 1 February 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95; Major General Maxwell D. Taylor letter to Colonel John G. Van Houten, 4 June 1951, USASOC History Office Classified Files, Fort Bragg, NC. [return]
  5. Colonel John G. Van Houten, letter to Major General Maxwell D. Taylor, 16 May 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  6. MG Kean had experience with two Ranger companies. The Eighth Army Rangers were originally attached to the 25th Infantry Division. When the Eighth was disbanded in March 1951, the 5th Ranger Company was attached when they arrived from the United States. EUSA Report, 1 February 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  7. Headquarters I Corps, Office of the Commanding General, letter to Commanding General Eighth U.S. Army, 1 April 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  8. Headquarters IX Corps, letter to Commanding General Eighth U.S. Army. [return]
  9. Headquarters IX Corps, letter to Commanding General Eighth U.S. Army. [return]
  10. Headquarters 25th Infantry Division, Office of the Commanding General, letter to Commanding General Eighth U.S. Army, 1 April 1951 National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  11. EUSA Memorandum to Assistant Chief of Staff G-3, 16 May 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  12. GHQ Far East Command Memorandum to Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3, 19 May 1951, Subject: Ranger Companies, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  13. Department of the Army, A C of S, G-3 message to CINCFE, 2 June 1951, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  14. As in World War II, soldiers accumulated points based on their time in theater and exposure to combat. Soldiers were rotated back to the United States when they had earned sufficient points. [return]
  15. Department of the Army, Office of the Adjutant General Memorandum, 11 October 1951, Subject: Inactivation of Ranger Infantry Companies, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. The deactivation of the Ranger Companies was instrumental in providing the personnel spaces for the activation of the new 10th Special Forces Group in 1952. Department of the Army, Office of the Chief of Psychological Warfare, Washington, DC, Memorandum for Record, Subject: Conference to Resolve Ranger Program, 24 August 1951, COL Aaron Bank, Special Operations Division, National Archives Record Group 319, Psy War 337 (24 August 1951). [return]
  16. United States Army Training and Doctrine Command Public Affairs Press Release, subject: Rangers Induct Distinguished Brigade Members, 15 April 2005, www.tradoc.army.mil/pao/tnsarchives/april05/042805html, accessed 6 June 2010. [return]
  17. Department of the Army, Office of the Adjutant General Memorandum, 3 October 1951, Subject: Ranger Training, National Archives Record Group 319, Box 380, Entry 95. [return]
  18. Department of the Army, Office of the Adjutant General memorandum, Subject: Ranger Training, 3 October 1951, USASOC History Office Classified Files, Fort Bragg, NC. [return]
  19. On 17 July 2006, the Ranger Special Troops Battalion was activated to provide sustainment, intelligence, reconnaissance and maintenance support to the deployed Ranger battalions of the 75th Ranger Regiment. The Ranger Training Brigade (RTB) at Fort Benning, Georgia, the proponent for the Army Ranger School, is a subordinate unit of Army Training and Doctrine Command and not directly affiliated with the 75th Ranger Regiment. [return]
  20. All infantry soldiers assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment must graduate from the Ranger School before they are awarded the distinctive sand-colored beret. [return]