Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_K - Korean War American History
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 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 (100)
  1. Remembering Korea: Korean War (Ashabranner, Brent K., Great American Memorials.) by Brent Ashabranner, 2001-09-01
  2. Korean War by Max Hastings, 1988-10-15
  3. A Documentary History Of The Negro People In The United States Volume 6: From the Korean War to the Emergence of Martin Luther King, Jr. by Herbert Aptheker, 2000-06-01
  4. The Korean War (The Greenwood Press Daily Life Through History Series) by Paul M. Edwards, 2006-09-30
  5. Should Be Soldiers: An Army Combat Battalion Medical Aid Station During The Korean War by John Benton, 2003-11-11
  6. Selling the Korean War: Propaganda, Politics, and Public Opinion in the United States, 1950-1953 by Steven Casey, 2008-03-21
  7. From the Hudson to the Yalu: West Point '49 in the Korean War (Texas a & M University Military History Series) by Harry J. Maihafer, 1993-11
  8. Letters of War: An Anthology of the Korean War Era by Herbert Gilford Renner Jr. Master Chief Hospital Corps USN Retired, 2007-10-08
  9. Decisive Battles of the Korean War: An Infantry Company Commander's View of the War's Most Critical Engagements by Sherman W. Pratt, 1992-08
  10. Korean War Almanac by Harry G. Summers, 1991-04
  11. Cold Ground's Been My Bed: A Korean War Memoir by Daniel Wolfe, 2005-03-25
  12. Korea: The First War We Lost by Alexander Bevin, 1993-04
  13. Interpreting Primary Documents - Korean War (paperback edition) (Interpreting Primary Documents)
  14. Firefight at Yechon: Courage and Racism in the Korean War by Charles M. Bussey, 2002-05-01

61. WWW-VL: History: United States History Index: Ethnic Studies
war Relocation Authority Camps in Arizona korean Heritage Library; korean american Digital Archive Hispanic american history; Chicano/Latino Resources; Hispanic
http://www.ukans.edu/history/VL/USA/ethnic.html
WWW-VL: HISTORY: UNITED STATES: ETHNIC STUDIES Click here for
The WWW-VL: History central catalogue
The WWW-VL: History: United States
WWW-VL W3 Search Engines

  • ETHNIC STUDIES: ASIAN AMERICAN
  • 62. EMPORIUM: A & E / Biography / History Channel
    korean war Fire and Ice DVD set. This unflinching look at the longest conflict in american history tells the complete story of the war, with reportage and
    http://radicalacademy.com/emporium200f.htm
    EMPORIUM Emporium Directory Main Page AMAZON STORES Magazine Outlet Music Store Video Store DVD Store Consumer Electronics Computer Store Software Store Outlet Store Baby Superstore Outdoor Living Store Gourmet Food Sporting Goods FEATURED STORES Academy Poster Store Academy Sheet Music SHOPPING CENTERS Financial Services Emporium Main Page The History Channel's Online Store Return to The Academy's History Channel Store Main Page Categories in The Academy's Store... Korean War Stories VHS Those who lived through it remember the "Forgotten War". Korean War: Fire and Ice set The tactics, personalities and hidden stories of the war that set the tone for a half-century of East/West tension come alive in this definitive set. Korean War: Fire and Ice DVD set The tactics, personalities and hidden stories of the war that set the tone for a half-century of East/West tension come alive in this definitive set.

    63. Images, HIS 68, American History Since 1877
    1970s); Tuskegee Institute history Class (Frances Benjamin Langley, VA) (Federation of american Scientists); korean war B29s (January 1951) (National Archives
    http://www.temple.edu/history/amhist2images.html
    History 68 , American History since 1877
    David Rezelman
    Images
    The "Gilded Age," 1877-1900
    The Progressive Era, 1900-1917

    64. Korean War Index
    history Home Page. Our Mission. american history Division. International history Division. Military history Division. Our Atlases. Staff Rides and Events.
    http://www.dean.usma.edu/history/web03/atlases/korean war/korean war index.htm
    Table of Contents 10. United Nations Delay, Withdrawal and Defense 11. Situation, 26 August and 10 September 1950 12. Situation, 26 August 1950 13. Situation, 26 October 1950 ... Return to Atlases

    65. DefenseLINK -African American History Month
    among different ethnicities. The korean war was the beginning of a new era for AfricanAmericans in the armed forces. By the end
    http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/Africanamericanhistory/AfricanAm2004/koreanv
    Jun. 09, 2004 War on Terror Transformation News Products Press Resources ... PROCLAMATION FEATURED ARTICLES
    Retired Gen. Advices Students

    Abell Urges Preparation

    General Credits Success to Hard Work

    House Named Historic
    ... IMAGERY
    Black Korean War Vet Recalls
    Retired Army Sgt. 1 st Class Dan LaMar and his friend, Lillie R. Brown, pose on the Washington Mall after the dedication of the Korean War Veterans Memorial postage stamp on July 27, 2003. Photo by Rudi Williams
    He also wanted to escape the blatant discriminatory practices in Macon, Ga., during the early 1950s.
    That was in February 1951, about eight months after North Korean troops opened fire with artillery and mortars on South Korea across the 38 th Parallel. LaMar hankered to show his mettle on the battlefield, but he was instead assigned to the 599 th Field Artillery at Fort Bragg, N.C. The unit was made up entirely of black men, except for the white first sergeant and commander.
    Over the 1950s and 1960s, LaMar said, foul attitudes toward African-Americans in the military slowly melted away and were replaced with more congenial and respectful relationships among different ethnicities.

    66. DefenseLINK -African American History Month
    Lillie R. Brown, pose on the Washington Mall after the dedication of the korean war Veterans Memorial Full Story by Rudi Williams american Forces Press Service.
    http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/Africanamericanhistory/AfricanAm2004/
    Jun. 09, 2004 War on Terror Transformation News Products Press Resources ... PROCLAMATION FEATURED ARTICLES
    Retired Gen. Advices Students

    Abell Urges Preparation

    General Credits Success to Hard Work

    House Named Historic
    ... IMAGERY
    Black Korean War Vet Recalls
    Retired Army Sgt. 1 st Class Dan LaMar and his friend, Lillie R. Brown, pose on the Washington Mall after the dedication of the Korean War Veterans Memorial postage stamp on July 27, 2003. Photo by Rudi Williams
    He also wanted to escape the blatant discriminatory practices in Macon, Ga., during the early 1950s.
    Full Story by Rudi Williams

    American Forces Press Service

    World War II Flying 'Ace' Salutes Racial Progress WWII aviator "Ace" Lee Andrew WASHINGTON, Feb. 20, 2004 – Decora ted World War II aviator and "Ace" Lee Andrew Archer Jr., 84, says he dreamed of becoming a fighter pilot at an early age. The Yonkers, N.Y.-born veteran recalled reading comic books during his boyhood that featured illustrated stories depicting World War I duels in the skies between Germany's Baron von Richthofen and allied fliers.

    67. Korean Bibliography: Topical Terms: 71
    korean war korean war Oral history Project korean war in 1969 korean war, 19501953Aerial operations, american. korean war, 1950-1953Amphibious operations.
    http://lcweb2.loc.gov/misc/korhtml/korbibSubjects71.html
    PREV NEXT INDEX NEW SEARCH ... Korean Bibliography
    Topical Terms
    Korean Royal Observatory, Astronomical clocks, History
    Korean Scientific and Technological Information Center

    Korean Social Science Research Council, Lists of members

    Korean Society for the Study of Education
    ... NEW SEARCH

    68. The Korean War Contrasted To Other Wars In America History:: Term Papers, Essays
    forget. All wars in american history fought before the korean war was based on either national survival or the gain of territory. A
    http://www.academon.com/lib/paper/1385.html
    Free Summary of Paper #1385
    BUY THIS PAPER
    LOOK FOR MORE RESEARCH PAPERS,

    ESSAYS AND BOOK REPORTS
    The Korean War Contrasted to Other Wars in America History
    Compares the Korean War, which was fought for ideological reasons, to other wars in American history. Paper #: # of words: # of sources: Written: Author: Donny Baseball Author's background: Junior at Umass Amherst. My major is Economics. I only submitted papers I did well on so good luck and keep buying.
    Abstract
    The Korean War Contrasted to Other Wars in America History This paper looks at other wars fought in American history and compares and contrasts them with the Korean War, which was fought for ideology. From the paper: "The Korean War is a war that many people will never forget. All wars in American history fought before the Korean War was based on either national survival or the gain of territory. A strong conflict was created between the Soviet Union and the United States. The conflict was so strong that wars were fought in the midst of this cold war. The Korean War was the first American war that was not fought for national survival, for territory, for manifest destiny or for hegemony. “Korea was the first ideological war.”"
    Keywords
    AMERICAN HISTORY CIVIL VIETNAM VIET CONG
    Related Searches
    Term papers on The Korean War Contrasted to Other Wars in America History
    Essays on The Korean War Contrasted to Other Wars in America History
    Research papers on The Korean War Contrasted to Other Wars in America History
    Student papers on The Korean War Contrasted to Other Wars in America History

    69. Ancestors In The Americas: Asian American History Timeline
    195053 - korean war 1952 - Clause in the McCarran - Walter Patsy Takemoto Mink becomes first Asian american woman to others for the first time in US history.
    http://www.cetel.org/timeline.html
    Asian American History Timeline This timeline is primarily adapted from Sucheng Chan's book Asian Americans: An Interpretive History
    1950-Present

    - Chinese and Filipinos reach Mexico on ships of the Manila galleon.
    - First recorded settlement of Filipinos in America. To escape imprisonment aboard Spanish galleons they jump ship in New Orleans and flee into the bayous of Louisiana.
    - First recorded arrival of Asian Indians in the United States.
    - Chinese "sugar masters" working in Hawaii; Chinese sailors and peddlers in New York.
    - U.S. and China sign first treaty.
    - Gold discovered in California. Chinese miners begin to arrive.
    - China is defeated by the British Empire in the first Opium War, resulting in Treaty of Nanjing whereby China is forced to cede the island of Hong Kong and open ports to foreign commerce.
    - A series of floods and crop failures in southern China lead to poverty and threat of famine among peasant farmers.
    - Three Chinese students arrive in New York City for schooling. One of them,Yung Wing, graduates from Yale in 1854 and becomes the first Chinese to graduate from a U.S. college. - California imposes Foreign Miner's Tax and enforces it mainly against Chinese miners, who were often forced to pay more than once.

    70. Battlefield:Vietnam | History
    another confrontation with the West so soon after the korean war. He used the help of the american Central Intelligence Photo courtesy of the soc.history.war.
    http://www.pbs.org/battlefieldvietnam/history/
    By Professor Robert K. Brigham, Vassar College The Second Indochina War, 1954-1975, grew out of the long conflict between France and Vietnam. In July 1954, after one hundred years of colonial rule, a defeated France was forced to leave Vietnam. Nationalist forces under the direction of General Vo Nguyen Giap trounced the allied French troops at the remote mountain outpost of Dien Bien Phu in the northwest corner of Vietnam. This decisive battle convinced the French that they could no longer maintain their Indochinese colonies and Paris quickly sued for peace. As the two sides came together in Geneva, Switzerland, international events were already shaping the future of Vietnam's modern revolution.
    The Geneva Peace Accords
    The Geneva Peace Accords, signed by France and Vietnam in the summer of 1954, reflected the strains of the international cold war. Drawn up in the shadow of the Korean War, the Geneva Accords represented the worst of all possible futures for war-torn Vietnam. Because of outside pressures brought to bear by the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China, Vietnam's delegates to the Geneva Conference agreed to the temporary partition of their nation at the seventeenth parallel to allow France a face-saving defeat. The Communist superpowers feared that a provocative peace would anger the United States and its western European allies, and neither Moscow or Peking wanted to risk another confrontation with the West so soon after the Korean War. According to the terms of the Geneva Accords, Vietnam would hold national elections in 1956 to reunify the country. The division at the seventeenth parallel, a temporary separation without cultural precedent, would vanish with the elections. The United States, however, had other ideas. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles did not support the Geneva Accords because he thought they granted too much power to the Communist Party of Vietnam.

    71. University Press Of Kentucky
    VOICES FROM THE korean war. Personal Stories of american, korean, and Chinese Soldiers Subjects 20% off!,history World, Asian Studies;Military Studies.
    http://www.kentuckypress.com/viewbook.cfm?Category_ID=1&Group=18&ID=543

    72. The American War Library: America's Largest Online Mili-vet Personnel Registry
    Judge Advocate General Military Law korean war Latin american Legion of american Veterans (american Legion) Info Unit and Ship history Preservation Native
    http://members.aol.com/veterans/
      THE
      AMERICAN
      WAR
      LIBRARY
      Established By Vets For Vets Since 1988
      The World's Largest On-line
      Military, Veteran, and Military Family
      Registry Over 31 Million Listings
      and growing daily
    Index The Registry And History Library
      Established July 4th, 1988
      The Military History War Library
      and All Nation Personnel Registry Accessible 24 hours/day through the internet or by modem , worldwide. Included on The Library are thousands of pages of data, statistics, documentation and files on all of America's military missions. Other search Wings include veteran and military associations, Who's Who, War Correspondents, Employment opportunities, Glossary of terms and abbreviations, films and books on war/military, over 210,000 Killed- and Missing-in-Action names, Reunion notices up to a year in advance, over 74,000 Associations, Honorary Diploma program, Veteran Organization RetroActive Decorations program, War Wings dedicated to all of America's military missions, ethnic American Wings, Unit and Ship histories, downloadable graphic images, association membership applications, and dozens of other categories. War Library Resource Catalog THE G.I. PHOTOGRAPH

    73. Korean War
    war an International history. Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press, 1995. Chen, Jian. China s Road to the korean war the Making of the Sinoamerican
    http://history.acusd.edu/gen/20th/korea.html
    pictures
    Korean War - 1950-53
    1945 - Korea divided at 38th parallel
    1947 - elections in south created Republic of Korea (ROK), president Syngman Rhee - north became People's Democratic Republic of Korea, president Kim Il Sung
    1948 - Russians withdrew troops
    1949 - US began to withdraw troops in June
    1949/12 - Mao arrived in Moscow for 2-month visit with Stalin, resulting in Feb. 1950 Sino-Soviet alliance; Stalin invited Ho Chi Minh to join Mao in Moscow in Feb. 1950: "Let's add to China's population of 475 million, the populations of India, Burma, Indonesia, the Philippines."
    1950/03/10 - CIA predicted NK attack in June - Charles Willoughby, G-2 in Asia, filed 1195 reports to MacArthur in 12 months after June 1949, reported massive buildup of NK troops on border, large numbers Chinese troops of Korean descent entered NK, but MacArthur ignored the reports, said May 1950: "I don't believe a shooting war is imminent"
    1950/04 - Stalin met with Kim Il-sung in Moscow but would not support Kim's plan to invade SK unless Mao agreed to help: "If you should get kicked in the teeth, I shall not lift a finger. You have to ask Mao for all the help." Kim visited Mao in Beijing and assured Mao as he had assured Stalin that the U.S. would not respond. Mao gave his approval because Mao was planning to invade Formosa and wanted Stalin's help. Stalin began to send Soviet supplies to NK and to plan the invasion, using the cover story that it would be a "counterattack" provoked by an alleged attack by SK. Mao was preoccupied with planning the Formosa attack and was surprised when the sudden invasion began in June.

    74. The Korean War - The Forgotten War, Between World War II And The Vietnam War
    Lengthy article describing the war from an american perspective, with images and some useful links.
    http://www.koreanwar.com
    Gen. Raymond Davis dies of heart attack at 88 Read his Medal of Honor Citation National Korean War Veterans Armistice Day, 2003
    By the President of the United States of America
    A Proclamation
    President Bush Visits Korean War Memorial July 25, 2003 The Korean War The Korean War was one of the most destructive of the 20th century. Perhaps as many as 4 million Koreans died throughout the peninsula, two-thirds of them civilians. (This compares, for example, with the 2.3 million Japanese who died in World War II.) China lost up to 1 million soldiers, and the United States suffered 54,246 dead and 103,284 wounded. Other UN nations suffered 3,322 dead and 11,949 wounded. Economic and social damage to the Korea Peninsula was incalculable, especially in the North, where three years of bombing left hardly a modern building standing. Decades later, Koreans still seek reconciliation and eventual reunification of their torn nation.
    Truman initiating Korean involvement.

    75. 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 Treatment of Black Soldiers
    in the Korean War 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, For Active Duty Personnel and Veterans
    Financing the Home of Your Dreams AMERICAN EX-PRISONERS OF WAR Go AMERICAN VALOR ARE YOU RELATED TO SOMEONE WHO SERVED IN YOUR NATION'S MILITARY? Go ARMY AREA HANDBOOK Go ARMY COMBAT ENGINEER, AN

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

    77. 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.

    78. 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/

    79. Korea's Partition: Soviet-American Pursuit Of Reunification, 1945-1948
    James I. Matray examines initial efforts at korean reunification between the end of World war II and the start of the korean war.
    http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/korpart.htm
    Review Essay
    Korea's Partition: Soviet-American Pursuit of Reunification, 1945-1948
    JAMES I. MATRAY
    © 1998 James I. Matray I t became fashionable more than a decade ago for scholars to portray the Korean War as a civil conflict, rejecting the traditional interpretation of the war as an example of Soviet-inspired, external aggression.[1] But the recent release of previously classified Soviet and Chinese documents has brought an abrupt end to this emerging consensus. This has made possible renewed emphasis on international factors in reexaminations of the Korean War. Kathryn Weathersby signaled that this shift was well underway in 1993 when she concluded that the war's origins "lie primarily with the division of Korea in 1945 and the polarization of Korean politics that resulted from . . . the policies of the two occupying powers. . . . The Soviet Union played a key role in the outbreak of the war, but it was as facilitator, not as originator."[2] This essay reviews and compares traditional and revisionist perspectives on the origins of the Korean War. The Historical Debate Neither the Hitchcock nor Stone interpretation had won many adherents as the fighting in Korea ended. Thereafter, the Truman assessment prevailed for a decade largely because Soviet-American relations remained acrimonious. Early studies of the Korean War blamed the United States for the North Korean attack, invariably charging that the Truman Administration had abandoned South Korea publicly and thus gave Kim Il-sung a green light to launch his invasion. For proof, these writers pointed to Secretary of State Dean Acheson's National Press Club speech excluding the ROK from the US "defensive perimeter," congressional rejection of the Korean aid bill, Senator Tom Connally's public prediction that Soviet or Chinese communist conquest of all Korea was inevitable, and limits on the military capabilities of South Korea.[8] This traditional analytical approach survived into the 1960s;[9] some recent detailed studies still reflect this viewpoint.[10]

    80. 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/
    To our veterans and to our men and women currently serving, THANK YOU and God bless.
    Rest in peace, Mr. President : Ronald Wilson Reagan 06 Feb 1911 - 05 Jun 2004

    The name I received in response to my request was James Arthur Harwood , a Sergeant in the US Army (5th Special Forces) who went Missing In Action in South Vietnam on 15 January 1971. There was another man lost in the same incident, a First Lieutenant by the name of Gerald Francis Kinsman ; I decided to adopt him too. I built remembrance pages for both the men on my 'have fun, catch all' website, that, amongst other things, included cyber pet adoptions and personal photos. Later on that year, I decided to create a site just for the guys. While I added to the site on occasion, it was not large, and I thought that with those two men, "that was that." Wrong. Around January or February of 1999, I began to think about the POW/MIA issue some more, and decided to see if there were any women I could adopt. I was informed that there was one, a civilian (missionary) surgeon named Dr. Eleanor Ardel Vietti

    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 4     61-80 of 113    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter