As we all know, on October 19, 1950, the volunteers crossed the Yalu River one after another and rushed to the battlefield of defending the homeland and the country, and until the armistice in July 1953, a total of 27 armies of the volunteers participated in foreign operations and won brilliant victories. Among them, the first batch of volunteers entered the DPRK one after another between October 19 and October 23, and the troops participating in the battle included the fourth division of the army and artillery, with a total of 19 divisions, and it can be said that these 19 division commanders were the best among the more than 200 division commanders of our army in the early days of liberation. So, what rank did these 19 division commanders later get? Let's talk about the famous Long Live Army - the 38th Army. Yang Dayi, commander of the 112th Division, a native of Cangxi, Sichuan, was born in the Red Fourth Front Army, served as the captain of the signal team of the 89th Division of the Red 30th Army during the Red Army, and fought in the Hexi Corridor with the Western Route Army, and was one of the 400 survivors of the Western Route Army who arrived in Xinjiang. During the Anti-Japanese War, he was transferred to Shandong and served as the commander of the Fourth Regiment of the Binhai Naval Region, and brought the Fourth Regiment into the main regiment. During the Liberation War, he was the deputy commander and division commander of the 2nd Vertical Division, and the commander of the 112th Division of the 38th Army, and obtained the rank of major general in 1955.
Jiang Chao, the commander of the 113th Division, was born in Dingxian County, Hebei Province, was born as a student soldier of the Northeast Army, and secretly joined the party when he was a company commander in the **57th Army. Unexpectedly, when the identity of a party member was discovered, the battalion commander wanted to harm him, Jiang Chao promptly pulled his subordinates to the Binhai Naval Region and incorporated them into the Hailing Independent Regiment, and later transferred to the Sixth Regiment of the Second Division of the Eighth Route in Shandong, with Jiang Chao as the commander. During the Liberation War, he served as the chief of staff of the 1st and 2nd Divisions of Dongye and the commander of the 113th Division of the 38th Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General. Zhai Zhongyu, commander of the 114th Division, a native of Jiyang, Shandong, participated in the 129th Movement in his early years, joined the party in 1938, and was sent to the Wan Yi Department of the Northeast Army to engage in military transportation work, followed the Wan Yi Uprising to the Binhai Naval District, and served as the instructor and commander of the new 111 Division. During the Liberation War, he served as the commander of the 56th Regiment of the 7th Vertical and 19th Division of Dongye, the deputy director of the Political Department of the 1st Vertical and 3rd Division, and the commander of the 340th Regiment of the 114th Division of the 38th Army. Before resisting US aggression and aiding Korea, he was exceptionally promoted to the commander of the 114th Division. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of colonel. The second is to talk about the 39th Army, which is a victorious army, and the 39th Army can be said to have no defeat on the Korean battlefield. Wang Liangtai, commander of the 115th Division, is a native of Bazhong, Sichuan, and a brave general from the Red Fourth Front Army. 1. After the division of the Fourth Front Army, the 294th Regiment of the 98th Division of the 33rd Army, where Wang Liangtai was located, was incorporated into the Red Fourth Regiment. During the fierce battle of Lazikou, Wang Liangtai became the captain of the first commando team, led his troops to climb to the top of the mountain, and conquered Lazikou in one fell swoop, and there were only two people left in the whole commando. During the Anti-Japanese War, he served as the commander of the 4th Company of the 685th Regiment, the deputy commander of the 3rd Battalion, the deputy commander of the 3rd Regiment of the 1st Brigade, and the commander of the 22nd Regiment of the 8th Brigade of the 3rd Division of the New Fourth Army. During the Liberation War, he served as the chief of staff of the 5th Division of the 2nd Column of Dongye, the deputy chief of staff of the 2nd Column, and the commander of the 115th Division of the 39th Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General.
Wang Yang, commander of the 116th Division, a native of Hengshan, Shaanxi, went to Yan'an after graduating from middle school, and was assigned to the southeast base area of Shanxi Province after graduation, starting from the deputy platoon commander and working all the way to the deputy regiment commander. During the Liberation War, he was transferred to the Northeast and served as the commander of the 13th Regiment of the 5th Division of the 2nd Column, the commander of the 5th Division, the commander of the 116th Division of the 39th Army, and the commander of the Guard Division of the Northeast Military Region. Wang Yang's military talent is very prominent, especially very experienced in the coordinated attack of infantry artillery, so the 116th Division is also one of the best divisions in the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea. In his later years, Wang Yang summed up his career as a horse soldier and wrote a military memoir - Ten Assaults, which the author believes is the memoir with the most dry goods in the war. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of colonel. Zhang Chengcheng, commander of the 117th Division, a native of Hong'an, Hubei, and a general from the Red 25th Army, served as the leader of the traffic squad, the leader of the vanguard platoon, and the staff officer of the Operations Section of the Military Headquarters in the Red 25th Army. During the Anti-Japanese War, he served as a staff officer of the 344 Brigade Headquarters, a battalion commander of the 689th Regiment, and the commander of the 3rd Independent Regiment of the 3rd Division of the New Fourth Army. During the Liberation War, he served as the commander of the 18th Regiment of the 6th Division of the 2nd Column of Dongye, the deputy commander of the 6th Division, and the commander of the 117th Division of the 39th Army, and was awarded the rank of major general in 1955. The fourth is about the whirlwind column - the 40th Army. Deng Yue, commander of the 118th Division, a native of Macheng, Hubei, is the third brave general from the Red Fourth Front Army in this article, joined the Red Army at the age of 12, and served as the highest platoon leader of the guard platoon of the Red Army University in the Red Army. During the Anti-Japanese War, he entered the University of Resistance and Xi, and later went to the Taihang base area with the first branch of the University of Resistance and served as the commander of the cadre battalion. After 1939, he successively served as deputy chief of staff and chief of staff of the Fourth Army Division of the Southern Hebei Military Region, and deputy commander of the 10th Regiment of the New Fourth Brigade of the 129th Division. During the Liberation War, he served as the deputy brigade commander and brigade commander of the 21st Brigade of the 7th Division of the 3rd Column, the deputy commander and division commander of the 7th Division, and the commander of the 118th Division of the 40th Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General.
Xu Guofu, commander of the 119th Division, a native of Lu'an, Anhui, was the fourth brave general from the Red Fourth Front Army in this article, a former political cadre, and was transferred to the first regiment of the cavalry division of the Red Fourth Front Army at the end of 1936 and participated in the Western Route Army. After the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, he was transferred back to Yan'an from Xinjiang to work, and served as the captain of the first team and the fourth team of the Eighth Route Army Camp School, the captain of the fourth team of the sixth brigade of the Anti-Japanese University, the commander of the second battalion of the first branch, the chief of staff and the head of the cavalry regiment of the fourth division of the Eighth Route Army in southern Hebei, and the deputy head and head of the 22nd regiment of the new Eighth Brigade. During the Liberation War, he served as the deputy political commissar and deputy brigade commander of the 323rd Brigade of Dongye, the deputy commander and commander of the 9th Division of the 3rd Column, the commander of the 13th Division of the 5th Column, and the commander of the 119th Division of the 40th Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General. The memoir "The Desert Wind is Urgent", written in his later years, revealed many well-known battles and little-known pasts, and the value is very high. Luo Chunsheng, commander of the 120th Division, a native of Ji'an, Jiangxi, was born in Shuanghong, and served as the highest commissioner of the Fifth Regiment of the Red Second Division of the Security Bureau in the Red First Army. During the Anti-Japanese War, he served as the deputy commander and battalion commander of the first independent battalion of Guanzhong of the left-behind corps, the deputy commander of the third independent regiment, and the captain of the teaching brigade of the first garrison brigade. During the Liberation War, he served as the commander of the guard regiment of the Liaodong Military Region, the commander of the Fifth Regiment of the Second Independent Division, the deputy commander of the 153rd Division of the 40th Army, the deputy commander of the 118th Division, and the commander of the 12th Division. At dawn on May 16, 1952, he was suddenly attacked by enemy planes on the Yeoncheon front line and died honorably. If it is not sacrificed, with its double red and one qualifications, the rank of major general is a certainty. The fourth is to talk about the latest column formed by Dongye - the original fifth column and the 42nd Army. Su Kezhi, commander of the 124th Division, a native of Shenxian County, Hebei, joined the Eighth Route Army in 1938, and basically served as a political cadre in the Eighth Route Army, serving as a propagandist of the Political Department of the First Regiment of the Central Hebei People's Self-Defense Army, an instructor of the 19th Brigade Company of the 7th Detachment of the 3rd Column of the Eighth Route Army, an instructor of the 3rd Battalion of the 21st Regiment of the Southward Detachment of the Hebei-Shandong-Henan Military Region, and the deputy director of the Political Department of the 32nd Regiment. During the Liberation War, he served as the deputy chief of staff of the First Army Subdivision of the Liaoning Military Region, the head of the Liaohe Detachment, the head of the Liaoning South Independent Division, the chief of staff of the 13th Division of the 5th Column of the Dongye, the deputy commander of the 126th Division of the 42nd Army, and the acting commander and division commander of the 124th Division of the 42nd Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of colonel.
Peng Longfei, commander of the 125th Division, a native of Yongxin County, Jiangxi, worked in the Hunan and Jiangxi Military Region in his early years, serving as the platoon commander of the Yongxin County Security Team, the instructor of the 53rd Regiment Company of the 18th Red Division, the political commissar of the Maoba Guerrilla Force in Yongshun County, and the instructor of the 47th Regiment of the 16th Division of the Red Sixth Army. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as the political commissar of the Yuxian Security Brigade of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region and the head of the guerrilla detachment of the Fourth Army Division of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region. During the Liberation War, he served as the commander of the 3rd Security Brigade of Shenyang City, the commander of the Liaoning Independent Division, the commander of the 14th Division of the 8th Column of Dongye, and the commander of the 125th Division of the 42nd Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General. Huang Jingyao, commander of the 126th Division, a native of Yudu, Jiangxi, was born in Shuanghong, joined the Red Army in 1931, successively served as a soldier and squad leader, and successively served as a platoon commander, company commander, deputy battalion commander, battalion commander, and deputy regiment commander during the Anti-Japanese War. During the Liberation War, he was the commander of the 10th Regiment of the 4th Division of the 2nd Column and the deputy commander of the 115th Division of the 39th Army. On the eve of the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, he was transferred to the commander of the 126th Division of the 42nd Army. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of colonel. The fifth is to talk about the 60th Army adapted from the 50th Army of the ** Rebel Army. Bai Zhaoxue, the commander of the 148th Division, a native of Xuanwei, Yunnan, graduated from the 17th phase of Yunnan Jiangwutang, and then applied for the fifth phase of Huangpu, which is a rare Huangpu student in the Yunnan Army and the only Huangpu student among the division commanders of the Volunteer Army. After graduation, he stayed in school and served as an adjutant of the school affairs department of the Whampoa Military Academy. Transferred to the 3rd Army, 8th Division, Adjutant Director. After the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, the Yunnan Army was reorganized, and the principal sent Bai Zhaoxue to the elite 60th Army of the Yunnan Army to serve as the chief of staff of the 540th Brigade of the 183rd Division, and in November 1938, he served as the commander of the 548th Regiment of the 183rd Division of the New 3rd Army, and in June 1943, he served as the deputy commander of the 19th Division. In March 1946, he served as the commander of the 182nd Division of the 60th Army, and after the Changchun Uprising, he served as the commander of the 148th Division of the 50th Army. After the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, he returned to China and served as the deputy director of the Yunnan Provincial Department of Industry.
Long Yao, commander of the 149th Division, a native of Jinyang, Sichuan, was one of the few Sichuanes in the Yunnan Army, graduated from the Yunnan Army Officer Candidate Corps, and after graduation, he became a Xi platoon commander under Lu Han's subordinates, and was promoted all the way to the commander of the provisional 21st Division for his combat merits, and was awarded the Order of Loyalty. After the Changchun Uprising, he was transferred to the commander of the 149th Division, and returned to China in August 1952 as the deputy director of the material department of the Second Infantry School. In May 1955, he changed jobs and served as the deputy commissioner of the Leshan Special Agency and a member of the Sichuan Provincial Party Committee. No military rank was obtained. Wang Jiashan, commander of the 150th Division, a native of Bayan, Heilongjiang, served in the Northeast Army in his early years and was the second brave general from the Northeast Army in this article. In 1928, he was admitted to the Japanese Army, and after graduation, it coincided with the fall of the Northeast during the 918 Incident, and he went to the puppet Manchurian to lurk under the instructions of the Central Commander, and was the commander of the Seventh Brigade of the Puppet Manchurian **. It is worth mentioning that during Wang Jiashan's tenure as the commander of the Seventh Brigade, the captain of the first brigade under his command was the future general of the South Korean Army, Bai Shanye. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, the old unit of the 7th Brigade was summoned to defect to ** and served as the commander of the provisional 52nd Division. In 1948, there was an uprising in Yingkou. In 1949, he served as the commander of the 50th Division of the 150th Army. After returning to China to resist US aggression and aid Korea, he served as vice chairman of the Liaoning Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and did not receive a military rank. The sixth is to talk about the only unit of the North China Military Region - the 66th Army. Yang Youshan, commander of the 196th Division, a native of Liaoyang, Liaoning Province, is the third brave general from the Northeast Army in this article, and the highest company commander of the Northeast Army in the Northeast Army. After the reorganization of the Northeast Army, Yang Youshan was disappointed with the future and defected to Yan'an, where he served as a military instructor and chief military instructor of the Northern Shaanxi Public School, the captain of the teaching team of the first division of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region, the deputy chief of staff of the first detachment, the chief of staff of the first regiment, the captain of the teaching brigade of the Jicha-Ji Military Region, the deputy brigade commander of the 2nd Vertical and 5th Brigade of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Field Army, the chief of staff of the Third Corps of the North China Military Region, and the commander of the 196th Division of the 66th Army. After returning to China to resist US aggression and aid Korea, he served as the principal of the 6th Senior Infantry School and the 31st Infantry School. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of colonel.
The commander of the 197th Division, Cheng Shaofu, a native of Henan, is the second brave general from the Red 25th Army in this article, and the highest company instructor in the Red 25th Army. After the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, he was transferred to the 6th team of the 115th Division Teaching Brigade as an instructor. In November 1937, he was transferred to the Chahar-Hebei Military Region, and successively served as the captain of the 2nd team of the Military and Political School of the Military Region, the head of the 11th Regiment of the Third Army Division, the head of the 2nd Detachment, and the commander of the 42nd Regiment. During the Liberation War, he served as the commander of the Third Army Division of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region, the commander of the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Column of the Field Army of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region, and the commander of the 197th Division of the 66th Army of the 20th Corps. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General. Song Yulin, commander of the 198th Division, a native of Huichang, Jiangxi, is the third brave general from the Red First Army in this article, and he is also the fourth red one, that is, the Red First Regiment of the Red First Army of the Red First Army, the Red First Division, and the Red First Regiment. During the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he served as the company commander of the Yang Chengwu Independent Regiment, the battalion commander and acting regiment commander of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Army Subdivision of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region, and the commander of the 5th Regiment of the 4th Army Subdivision of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region. During the Liberation War, he served as the commander of the 8th Brigade of the 8th Column of the 2nd Corps of the North China Military Region, the commander of the 188th Division of the 63rd Army, and the commander of the 198th Division of the 66th Army, and was awarded the rank of major general in 1955. Finally, let's talk about the three artillery divisions that followed the first batch of volunteers into North Korea. Wen Zheng, commander of the 1st Artillery Division, a native of Baxian County, Hebei, formerly known as Liu Shutang, joined the Eighth Route Army in 1937, was born as a political cadre, and successively served as a propaganda officer, political instructor, and director of the Political Department of the Military Region Teaching Corps of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region, the political commissar of the artillery battalion directly under the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region, the political commissar of the 3rd Battalion of the Artillery Regiment of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters, and the political commissar of the Yan'an Artillery School Brigade. During the Liberation War, he served as the political commissar and regiment commander of the 2nd Artillery Regiment of the Artillery Column of the Northeast Military Region, the chief of staff of the 1st Artillery Command Post, the deputy commander, chief of staff and division commander of the 1st Artillery Division, and was awarded the rank of colonel in 1955.
Song Chengzhi, commander of the Second Artillery Division, a native of Jinzhai, Anhui Province, the sixth brave general from the Red Fourth Front Army in this article, joined the Red Army at the age of 14, and fought in the Hexi Corridor with the Western Route Army, and was one of the 400 survivors of the Western Route Army who arrived in Xinjiang. After completing Xi his studies, he went to Yan'an to serve as an instructor at the artillery school, the commander of the artillery teaching battalion of the Eighth Route Army Headquarters, and the director of the training department of the artillery school, training thousands of artillery talents. During the Liberation War, he went to the Northeast and served as the commander of the first heavy artillery regiment in Dongye, the Third Regiment of the First Artillery Division. After the Liaoshen Campaign, Song Chengzhi was exceptionally promoted to commander of the Second Artillery Division. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General. Wang Heng, commander of the Eighth Artillery Division, a native of Renqiu, Hebei, is the fourth brave general from the Northeast Army in this article, and once served as the company commander of the Northeast Army and the captain of the puppet Hebei East Security Team. The Eighth Route Army launched the Jidong Rebellion, Wang Heng led the security team to revolt, and successively served as the commander of the Eighth Route Army's Jire Liao Advance Army, the 3rd Column of the Eighth Route Army and the chief of staff of the 29th Regiment of the Central Hebei Military Region, and the chief of staff of the 12th Regiment of the 13th Army Division of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region. During the Liberation War, he served as the chief of staff of the 16th Army Division of the Jireliao Military Region, the commander of the artillery brigade of the Jichareliao Military Region, the deputy commander of the 1st Division of the Fourth Field Artillery, and the commander of the 8th Artillery Division. In July 1951, Wang Heng led the troops to carry out the training period suddenly fell ill and suffered from typhoid fever, and unfortunately passed away on July 24 at the age of 39.