Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_K - Korean War American History

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 113    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Korean War American History:     more books (99)
  1. The Korean War in History (Studies on East Asia) by James Cotton, 1989-01
  2. Under Army Orders: The Army National Guard during the Korean War (Williams-Ford Texas A&M University Military History Series) by William Donnelly, 2001-04-01
  3. Unexpected Journey: A Marine Corps Reserve Company in the Korean War by Randy Keith Mills, Roxanne Mills, 2000-10
  4. The Greenwood Library of American War Reporting, Vol. 6: World War II, the Asian Theater & the Korean War (Greenwood Library of American War Reporting) by Bradley Hamm, Donald Lewis Shaw, 2005-06
  5. The Korean War: No Victors, No Vanquished by Stanley Sandler, 1999-11
  6. Inchon to Wonsan: From the Deck of a Destroyer in the Korean War by James Edwin Alexander, 1996-10
  7. Histories of American Army Units: World Wars I and II and Korean Conflict
  8. Histories of American Army Units/World War I and II and Korean Conflict with Some Earlier Histories by C.E. Dornbush, 1956
  9. The Korean War: An Exhaustive Chronology (3 Vol. Set) by Bud Hannings, 2007-09-04
  10. The Medics' War: United States Army in the Korean War by Albert E. Cowdrey, 2005-06-30
  11. Cape Verdean-American Korean War VeteransofNew Bedford, Massachusetts by Jose A. Tavares dos Anjos, 2009-10-27
  12. Rutherford County in the Korean War by Anita Price Davis, James M. Walker, 2006-06-07
  13. Should Be Soldiers: An Army Combat Battalion Medical Aid Station During the Korean War by John Benton, 2004-07-12
  14. Blood on the Hills: The Canadian Army in the Korean War by David Jay Bercuson, 2002-04-30

81. Korean War Web Sites
Links to websites on the korean war. Includes museums, memorials, veterans associations, unit histories, combat action reports, casualties, Africanamerican soldiers, retrospective studies of the war and combat effectiveness.
http://members.aol.com/veterans/warlib6k.htm
Email The American War Library
Home
G.I. Photo Museum Locator/Registry Forms ... Discussion Forums To add a Web site to this list:
Link Request
VIP Link This page is updated frequently
Webmasters, link to:
http://members.aol.com/veterans/warlib6k.htm Please let us know
if any site listed below is inaccessible to you.
Korean War Discussion Forum
(Admission is free) Subscribe to The Korean War Forum Korean War (1945-present) discussion, news, events, issues, people
Enter your full e-mail address in the space below
A mailing list hosted by FindMail 13 BOMB SQUADRON Go 24 INFANTRY RCT Go A FRESH PERSPECTIVE Go A GUIDE TO SELECTED RESOURCES OF PERKINS LIBRARY Go AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE KOREAN WAR CONFERENCE Go AIR FORCE FORWARD AIR CONTROLLER, AN Go AIR FORCE RADAR OPERATOR, AN Go AIRBORNE INFANTRYMAN, AN Go AIRBORNE OPERATIONS IN KOREA Go AMERICAN DREAM, Financing the Home of Your Dreams
for Active Duty Personnel and Veterans
AMERICAN EX-PRISONERS OF WAR Go AMERICAN VALOR ARE YOU RELATED TO SOMEONE WHO SERVED IN YOUR NATION'S MILITARY?

82. Documents Related To The Cold War
As part of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, this institute distributes and analyzes governments' Cold warrelated materials. and Surrounding Area). Latin american Program. Mexico Institute
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/coldwar.htm
Documents Relating to American Foreign Policy
The Cold War
"Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad, 1798 - 1993," by Ellen C. Collier, Specialist in U.S. Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division, Washington DC: Congressional Research Service Library of Congress October 7, 1993 The Cold War International History Project, Woodrow Wilson Center The Harvard Project on Cold War Studies Parallel History Project on NATO and the Warsaw Pact ... CNN Special on the Cold War
Pre-1945
The Venona Files National Counterintelligence Center, "Venona" National Security Archive, Oral History, Professor George Kennan Havana Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics, July 21-30,1940 ... U.N., Plan of Work Adopted by the Commission for Conventional Armaments, July 8, 1947
The Marshall Plan
ADDRESS BY GENERAL GEORGE C. MARSHALL SECRETARY OF STATE OF THE UNITED STATES AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY, JUNE 5, 1947 Commencement Address, Harvard University, June 5, 1947, Speaker: George C. Marshall, U.S. Secretary of State in Real Audio Format Memorandum: Secretary of State's Harvard Speech of June, 1947, filed July 2, 1947 PBS, ...
Memorandum From the Chief of WH/4/PM, Central Intelligence Agency (Hawkins) to the Chief of WH/4 of the Directorate for Plans (Esterline), Washington, January 4, 1961. (Preparations for an invasion of Cuba)
Add ress Of President-Elect John F. Kennedy Delivered To A Joint Convention Of The General Court Of The Commonwealth Of Massachusetts, The "City on a Hill" Speech,

83. Coalition Of Families Of American POW/MIAs From The Cold And Korean War
Families of american POW/MIAs from the Cold and korean Wars, dedicated to a full accounting of all missing servicemen.
http://www.coalitionoffamilies.org/

84. QRF - Quality 15mm & 1:100 Scale Wargames Figures
Manufactures ranges of 15mm and 1100 scale miniatures which include periods such as the american Civil war, World wars 1 and 2, Post war including ArabIsraeli and korean war, and many models of modern vehicles and infantry.
http://www.quickreactionforce.co.uk/

85. Korean War History Guide .. The History Beat
The history Beat covers a variety of topics, including a korean war history Guide with top korean war history web sites, timelines, cultural resources and more!
http://history.searchbeat.com/koreanwar.htm
Amazon.com Jobs Metasearch Quick
Searches!
addresses area codes books cameras classical music directions electronics email search europe maps int'l jobs jobs kitchen maps meta-search movies movie times music news phone numbers software stocks toys traffic tv listings video games comparison shop family fashion gov't ... site map
Enter your " City, State ", US Zip Code or ICAO Search Beat Society and Culture History War ... Twentieth Century > Korean War
Amazon.com History Books

86. Reference Links - American History
topical eras in american history. As with all history, there is overlap. For example,specific subheadings of links are offered for Cold war , Civil Rights
http://www.legislature.state.al.us/misc/guide/student_teacher/reference/ref_amhi

REFERENCE LINKS - AMERICAN HISTORY

Welcome to The Alabama Legislature's Reference American History Links Page. The subheadings above are provided as chronological and topical eras in American history. As with all history, there is overlap. For example, specific subheadings of links are offered for "Cold War", "Civil Rights" and "The U.S. Space Program", all of which cover much the same time period. However, because of the impact of these subjects, it was deemed desirable to provide links specific to these. A subheading, entitled "1950's-1990's" provides a venue for links relating to post-World War II America, but which do not pertain to the aforementioned categories. All of the links on this site have been examined for content and will be routinely checked in order to isolate links that may no longer be operable. Please know that we welcome the submission of links appropriate for this site and encourage such input. Send link submissions, comments or suggestions to

87. What I Can Do - I Will -
A tribute to korean and Vietnam war POW/MIA/KIA, but dedicated to all american veterans.
http://www.faraway-soclose.org/

88. Reaction Formation
A psychological application of Freud's theory about Reaction Formation to the plight of american POWs during the korean war
http://www.koolpages.com/almalaika/repb.html
Psychoanalysis
And Culture
It is often assumed that psychiatry is the school of thought which focuses on the individual, that its main concern is , moreover, the various forms of mental illness which some individuals suffer from. This is not true. Freud wrote a book entirely devoted to Group psychology, and there are various studies which relied on the insights of psychiatry to explain such cultural phenomena as Literature, the Cinema, and diverse cultural phenomena. Politicians today rely on the insights of psychologists to comprehend the motives for world leaders acting as they do. Freud Defense Mechanisms: It is well known that Sigmund Freud based his analytic system on interaction with his patients. During the exchange, he discovered that patients resist telling him the truth about certain experiences from their past. He thought that this is intentional, at first, and then he came to discover that, sometimes, patients just forget, or deny, or repress, the truth, because it is difficult to deal with.. The anxiety level of the subject rises considerably when reminded of such experiences, some of which being traumatic and frightening. Therefore, the defenses are methods of concealing, either from the psychiatrist, or from the self, at least some of these experiences which could well be partial causes of the illness the patient suffers from.. It is therefore important to stress that these defense mechanisms are rhetorical.. They express the self in language.. as the subject wishes to present him/herself to the world.

89. Casualties Of The Korean War
Statistics on North korean, South korean, american, Chinese and other nations' casualties and fatalities during the korean conflict.
http://www.clas.berkeley.edu/~korea/casualties.html

90. Korean War US POW's In Soviet Jails
A news story on american prisoners of wars captured during the korean war and sent to Soviet prisons and labor camps.
http://www.kimsoft.com/korea/mia-russ.htm
Korean War US POW's in Soviet Jails
By JAMES BROOKE
July 19, 1996, The New York Times Khabarovsk, Russia Time has stooped Vladimir Trotsenko's shoulders, but his memories are as clear as his cobalt blue eyes: the American flyer, his right arm in a new cast, in a Soviet military hospital ward. The American, he recalled, would slowly re peat, "America San Francisco, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Chicago." Curious, Trotsenko, a paratrooper recovering from a knee injury, would hobble down the third-floor hospital corridor to gaze at the four imprisoned Americans. The airman with the broken arm would point to a crewman in a body cast and would make cradling m otions with his arms, indicating that the man had left two small children back home. The year was 1951, and the place was Military Hospital 404 in Novosysoyevka, 300 miles south of here. Stalin was in his last years, the Korean War was raging, and the Cold War with the United States was on. "I did not talk about this for 43 years," Trotsenko, spry at 68, said as his wife, Nina, served blini and borscht at their wooden dacha outside this city, the largest industrial center of Russia's Far East. In 1994, he noticed a small advertisement in a local newspaper placed by a new group, a Russian-American commission on prisoners of war. Admitting that he was "tortured" about whether "to call or not to call," he finally did.

91. Bills-Page
Statistics on american casualties during the korean war and on the contributions of other nations to the United Nations war effort in Korea. Includes photo galleries.
http://home.earthlink.net/~woll/Bills-Page.htm
THE FORGOTTEN WAR....KOREA Korean War Memorial, Washington, D.C., dedicated July 27, 1995, forty two years after the cessation of hostilities. The United States Armed Forces suffered 33,665 Americans killed in action in Korea; 3,275 died there from non-hostile causes. * TOTAL: 36,940 Americans gave their lives in the Korean Theater. There were 92,134 Americans wounded in action in 103,284 incidents. A total of 1,789,000 Americans served in the Korean theater during the Korean War from June 25, 1950 to July 27, 1953. There are still 8,176 MIAs. South Korea sustained 1,312,836 military casualties, including 415,004 dead; casualties among other United Nations allies totaled 16,532, including 3,094 dead. Estimated Communist casualties were 2 million. The economic and social damage to the Korean nation was incalculable. *Source: Office of Secretary of Defense, Washington Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports (WHS/DIOR); Defense Prisoners of War/Missing in Action Office (DPMO). Data released 10January 2000. Some of us were fortunate enough to come home and resume our lives with our families. Others, never returned.

92. Modern History Sourcebook: Andrei A. Gromyko: On American Intervention In Korea,
The Soviet view of the 1950 american intervention in the korean war from Andrei Gromyko, the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the USSR.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1950-gromyko-korea.html
Back to Modern History SourceBook
Modern History Sourcebook:
Andrei A. Gromyko:
On American Intervention In Korea, 1950
Statement by the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the USSR, July 4,1950 The events now taking place in Korea broke out on June 25 as the result of a provocative attack by the troops of the South Korean authorities on the frontier areas of the Korean People's Democratic Republic. This attack was the outcome of a premeditated plan. From time to time Syngman Rhee himself and other representatives of the South Korean authorities had blurted out the fact that the South Korean Syngman Rhee clique had such a plan. As long ago as October 7, 1949, Syngman Rhee, boasting of success in training his army, stated outright, in an interview given to an American United Press correspondent, that the South Korean Army could capture Pyongyang in the course of three days. On October 31, 1949, Sin Sen Mo, Defence Minister of the Syngman Rhee Government, also told newspaper correspondents that the South Korean troops were strong enough to act and take Pyongyang within a few days. Only one week before the provocative attack of the South Korean troops on the frontier areas of the Korean People's Democratic Republic, Syngman Rhee said, in a speech on June 19 in the so-called "National Assembly" where Mr. Dulles, adviser to the U.S. State Department, was present: "If we cannot protect democracy in the cold war, we shall win in a hot war."

93. TheHistoryNet.com
A brief article by Harry G. Summers, a noted american strategist, providing fresh insights on the korean war and its longterm impact on american foreign and military policy.
http://www.thehistorynet.com/MilitaryHistory/articles/0496_text.htm

About
History From the editors of TheHistoryNet Search
in this topic in About in the Web Subscribe Classifieds TheHistoryNet Shop eContents tod('pod'); onClick="return true" onMouseOver="document.images.imageDaily3.src='/dailypicture_button.gif'" onMouseOut="document.images.imageDaily3.src='/dailypicture_button.gif'"> Sponsored by:
American Military U.
tod('tih'); onClick="return true" onMouseOver="document.images.imageDaily2.src='/dailytoday_button.gif'" onMouseOut="document.images.imageDaily2.src='/dailytoday_button.gif'">
MAGAZINES
America's Civil War
American History Aviation History British Heritage ... World War II
GUIDESITES
20th Century History

African History

African-American

History
... Women's History Subscribe to our newsletters Communique Daily Quiz TheHistoryNet The Irish Desert Fox Mid-19th century America was a nation brimming with newcomers seeking opportunity. Many of these immigrants, who found their newly adopted nation embroiled in a great Civil War, soon became engaged in the fight and played a significant role in preserving the Union they had so recently become a part. Among our latest additions to TheHistoryNet

94. Programs @ The Woodrow Wilson International Center For Scholars
Charles Armstrong will present his new book, The North korean Revolution, 1945 330pm 600 pm The Cold war International history Project and
http://wwics.si.edu/index.cfm?fuseaction=topics.home&topic_id=1409

95. Highlights Of Mobilization, Korean War
A U.S. Army study of plans for mobilizing and transporting american troops and equipment to Korea as well as the mobilization of american industry to military production.
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/documents/KOREA/kwmob.htm
[2-3.7 AF.C] HIGHLIGHTS OF MOBILIZATION, KOREAN WAR Office of the Chief of Military History Department of the Army Dr. Robert W. Coakley 10 March 1959 [Note: This manuscript was prepared by Dr. Robert W. Coakley of the Office of the Chief of Military History (now US Army Center of Military History) for official. The original is on file in the Historical Manuscripts Collection (HMC) under file number 2-3.7 AF.C, which should be cited in footnotes, along with the title. It is reproduced here with only those limited modifications required to adapt to the World Wide Web; spelling, punctuation, and slang usage have not been altered from the original. Where modern explanatory notes were required, they have been inserted as italicized text in square brackets.] RESUME OF ARMY MOBILIZATION DURING THE KOREAN WAR 1. Existing mobilization plans at the beginning of the Korean War, both for personnel, and materiel, were all framed in terms of all-out war. The Department of Defense had no plans for limited war. Thus, the entire mobilization process was one of improvisation. The limited mobilization undertaken had to be aimed both at providing and equipping the necessary forces for fighting a limited war in Korea and at placing the United States in a posture to meet Communist threats on a world-wide basis. 3. Total strength of the organized reserve corps on 30 June 1950 consisted of 217,435 officers and 291,182 enlisted men. Of these, 68,785 officers and 117,756 enlisted men were participating in paid drills in 10,629 activated units. National Guard strength was 324,761, about 25,000 below authorized levels. The National Guard had 27 organized divisions plus supporting units but its equipment was only 46 per cent of requirements. Training was hampered by lack of funds and facilities. The principal strength of both organized reserves and National Guard lay in the fact that much of their personnel had seen combat service during World War II.

96. Korean War Combat Photographs
american Armor Flees, Pursuit in the West. But . Half the total militarycasualties of the korean war occurred while those talks dragged on.
http://www.rt66.com/~korteng/smallarms/
KOREAN WAR PHOTO-DOCUMENTARY
B.L. Kortegaard

Click Thumbnail For Wider-Angle Annotated Photo
(These annotated views will open in new windows, so as not to require re-loading of this page)
Fighting Vehicles

Navy KW Photos

Aussie KW Photos

Pusan
...
Map of Korea

Korean Terrain Invasion Map
NK Invades - 6/25/50 East Central Asia Map Pusan, 7/50, UN Entry port Exhausted ROKs - 7/1/50 Lambs To The Slaughter ROK wounded - 7/28/50 34th Infantry, 7/6/50 19th Infantry at Taepyong-ni Bombed Out T34s 5th Marines Mount Out ROKs Moving Up 155 Howitzers in Battery Death From The Skies Bowling Alley - 8/21/50 Marines at the Naktong WIA, 8/50 Rescue under fire Navy Corpsmen at work Bombed Out T34's Hill 99, 9/2/50 M-46 Patton - 90mm HV T34 Burns from M-26 Hit 31 Days On The Line M-24 Chaffees at Masan Another Murdered GI One of the Murderers? More Murdered Civilians Captured NK Weapons Sanctuary for murderers? 76mm Self Propelled Guns INVASION OF INCHON Other Korean War Photos of 1950 Army Overview Version of this phase The Fighting Wantuck Inchon - Assault on Wolmi-do Marines mop up Wolmi Wolmi-do Gunpit Securing the causeway Red Beach under fire To A Posthumous MOH Red Beach Captured 1st Marines Hit Blue Beach MacArthur and a few Marines T34s on the Road to Seoul 1st Marines take Yongdungpo On the road to Seoul Return to the Han, 9/50

97. NARA | Research Room | State-Level Casualty Lists For The Korean Conflict, Sorte
Official roster of american casualities in the korean war as recorded in the U.S. National Archives.
http://www.archives.gov/research_room/research_topics/korean_war_casualty_lists/
Where Is...? / How Do I...? Where Is...? Hot Topics / What's New The Constitution The Declaration of Independence The Bill of Rights Genealogy Veterans' Service Records Archival Research Catalog (ARC) Access to Archival Databases (AAD) Electronic Records Archives (ERA) Archives Library Info. Center (ALIC) Calendar of Events FAQs FOIA Reading Room Information Security Oversight Office Interagency Working Group (IWG) Locations and Hours (Facilities) Media Desk Organization Chart Preservation Prologue Magazine Publications How Do I...? Use this Site Order Copies Contact NARA Visit NARA Apply for a Job Volunteer at NARA Research Online Find a Public Law Apply for a Grant Find Records Management Training April 9, 2003 Sections Research Room Main Page New in Research Room Getting Started Genealogy ... Research Paths Resources Guide to Federal Records Access to Archival Databases (AAD) Microfilm Locator Archives Library Information Center (ALIC) ... Search in Research Room State-Level Casualty Lists for the Korean Conflict, sorted by Home of Record
Guam
Puerto Rico
Virgin Islands
Canal Zone

Other, including Canada and England

98. Friendly Fire Notebook
There were many instances where american forces in Korea mistook other other US soldiers for the enemy and opened fire on their own people. This site records such friendly fire incidents during the korean war.
http://members.aol.com/amerwar/ff/ffk.htm
    Since 1988 Email The American War Library Home
    KOREAN WAR
    FRIENDLY-FIRE
    NOTEBOOK
    Established by
    The American War Library
    11 November 1996
    The Korean War Friendly-Fire Notebook's mission
    is to collect and provide information on the
    deeply regrettable military incidents during the war
    that took or impaired the lives
    of our fellow countrymen and women. Anyone possessing information about a Korean War Friendly Fire
    incident is invited to place those details into this Notebook
    or link to it. INCIDENTS 151ENGR C Bn Sometime in May of 1953, I was stationed about 30 miles north of Uijonbu with the 151ENGR C Bn. We were falling out for revilee, the first time since being in Korea. While I was going out to formation I heard a loud explosion just over the hill, just in a second our jets come over the hill and started strafing us. They made four passes over us with four F84 aircraft, destroyed our motor pool, killed several KSC labors, and one GI lost the lower part of his arm, I still have his name. The loud explosion I heard at first was them dropping a bomb on the Imjin River knocking one section out. Contact: John Lock 2ID 38 TANK CO After being WIA, I spent five weeks in the hospital. I returned to my unite, the 38th. Tank Company of the 2nd. ID. I was given a light duty of job (mail clerk). My outfit had relieved the British front line troops, and sometime in January of 1953, while going for the mail at APO 248. The driver and myself witnessed a Marine jet bomb an American unit, which was several miles from the front line. We were less than a fourth of a mile away when the bombing occured, and the best I can remember, nine men were killed and many more wounded. I never did find out why the Marine plane would bomb an American unite so far from the front line. I didn't know any of those men, but it bothered me, that men had to die by the hands of their own countrymen. I wonder if any of the reader of this site, remember any thing about that incident. I have often wondered just what the goverment told the parents, about the way their sons had died in Korea?

99. Military.com
WWII Sketchbook Journal Gettysburg The korean war Vietnam Cold war MemoriesThe Periods american Revolution war Of 1812 Expansion Civil
http://www.military.com/NewContent?file=newhistorypage

100. AFRICAN-AMERICANS IN MILITARY HISTORY/Korean War
Center of Military history, US Army, 1996. 294 p. Book call no. 951.9042 B786b.Bussey, Charles M. Firefight at Yechon Courage and Racism in the korean war.
http://www.au.af.mil/au/aul/bibs/afhist/afkor.htm

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-100 of 113    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter