On Sept. 15, 1950, the successful Incheon Landing Operation began to secure a bridgehead and then recapture Seoul. The ROK-U.S. Combined Forces Naval Forces occupied Gimpo Airport and arrived at an alternative at 8 p.m. on the 19th, with 14 members of the Doha Round to occupy Haengju Fortress. The 125 highlands, towering along the river, are well-known sites where Admiral Kwon Yul of the Japanese Invasion of Korea was victorious, and they were an important highland that controlled the Han River and controlled the searchable valley area. Therefore, five of the troops who arrived in the alternate city went up a little below normal, but when there was no resistance, they came back down and signaled to the main building to go down. Therefore, the headquarters began to ship nine amphibious vehicles, but the troops returned to the area where the enemy's mortars and machine gun shots carried out. On the morning of August 20, the ROK-U.S. Combined Forces Command launched a fierce attack-ready artillery attack on 125 highlands in the Haengju Fortress and launched an enemy attack from 6:45 a.m., but it took away the site at 9:40 a.m. and secured a bridgehead to enter Seoul safely. In honor of the distinguished service in recapturing the capital city of Seoul, the ROK-U.S. Combined Forces Command constructed the first rain on September 28, 1958 in Seowon Village on the northern side of Haengju Bridge, but reconstructed it from the Marine Corps Command on September 20, 1984.
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