The Jamestown Line was a series of defensive positions occupied by United Nations forces in the Korean War. Following the end of the 1951 Chinese Spring Offensive and the UN May-June 1951 counteroffensive, the war largely became one of attrition and trench warfare, fought along static defensive lines reminiscent of the First World War.[1] As a consequence, major UN ground operations from late spring—under the direction of Lieutenant GeneralMatthew Ridgway—were primarily conducted to recapture or establish durable defensive lines, including the Wyoming, Missouri, Kansas and Jamestown Lines.[2] The Jamestown Line stretched from the Imjin River near Munsan-ni then arched northeast 35 miles (56 km) in the strategically important sector of front from the Kimpo peninsula on the Yellow Sea coast to a point east of Kumhwa.[3]
^O’Neill, Robert (1985). Australia in the Korean War 1950−53. Volume II. Combat Operations. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. ISBN0-642-04330-2., pp. 208–242.
^Varhola, Michael (2000). Fire and Ice: the Korean War, 1950–1953. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN1-882810-44-9., p. 21.
^ abGrey, Jeffrey (1988). The Commonwealth Armies and the Korean War. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN0-7190-2770-5., p. 135.
^Varhola, Michael (2000). Fire and Ice: the Korean War, 1950–1953. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN1-882810-44-9., p. 22.
^Grey, Jeffrey (1988). The Commonwealth Armies and the Korean War. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN0-7190-2770-5., p. 133–135.
^Coulthard-Clark, Chris (2001). The Encyclopaedia of Australia's Battles (Second ed.). Crows Nest: Allen and Unwin. ISBN1-86508-634-7. p. 269.