Korean War Veterans Memorial

Memorial Photo Overview:

panaramic view of lead soldiers

 

The Korean War Veterans Memorial was authorized by Public Law 99-572 on Oct. 28, 1986 "… to honor members of the United States Armed Forces who served in the Korean War, particularly those who were killed in action, are still missing inaction, or were held as prisoners of war." The law established an advisory board of 12 veterans appointed by the president to coordinate all aspects of the memorial’s construction. The site is located adjacent to the Lincoln Memorial directly across the reflecting pool from the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.

The American Battle Monuments Commission managed the project and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers provided assistance. The architect of record is Cooper Lecky Architects. President Bill Clinton and South Korean President Kim Young Sam dedicated the memorial on July 27, 1995. Since the dedication, several modifications have been incorporated: a kiosk to provide shelter for National Park Service personnel and a computer system with data housing the "Honor Role," which was accessible to the public. Correcting accessibility issues and replacement of the lighting in the statuary and along the mural wall with a state-of-the-art fiber optic system were required. Reconstruction of the pool and tree grove by the National Park Service and Corps of Engineers to improve tree maintenance and operate the reflecting pool was completed in July 1999. The overall cost for the design and construction of the memorial and kiosk was $16.5 million.


Statues:

There are 19 statues sculpted by Frank Gaylord of Barre, Vt., and cast-fabricated by Tallix Foundries of Beacon, N.Y. They are approximately 7-foot 3-inch tall (heroic scale) and consist of 14 Army, 3 Marines, 1 Navy, 1 Air Force. They represent an ethnic cross section of America with 12 Caucasian, 3 African American, 2 Hispanic, 1 Oriental, 1 Indian (Native American).

 

 

 

The juniper bushes are meant to be symbolic of the rough terrain encountered in Korea and the granite strip, the obstacles overcome in war. The Marines in column have the helmet chin straps fastened and helmet covers. Three of the Army statues are wearing paratrooper boots and all equipment is authentic from the Korean War era (when the war started most of the equipment was WWII issue).

 

 

Three of the statues are in the woods, so if you are at the flagpole looking through the troops, you can't tell how many there are. The statues are made of stainless steel, a reflective material that when seen in bright sunlight causes the figures to come to life. The blowing ponchos give motion to the column, so you can feel them walking up the hill with the cold winter wind at their backs, talking to one another. At nighttime the fronts of the statues are illuminated with a special white light; the finer details of the sculpture are clearly seen and the ghosts appear.

 

 

 

 

Position
Service
Duty
Race
Weapon
1 Army Lead Scout Caucasian M-1 Garand Rifle
2 Army Scout Caucasian M-1 Garand Rifle
3 Army Squad Leader Caucasian M-1 Garand Rifle
4 Army BAR Gunner Afro-American BAR
5 Army BAR Assistant Gunner Caucasian M-1/2 Carbine
6 Army Rifleman Afro-American M-1 Garand Rifle
7 Army Group Leader Caucasian M-1/2 Carbine
8 Army Radio Operator Caucasian M-1/2 Carbine
9 Navy Medical Corpsman Hispanic None
10 Army Army Fwd Observer Caucasian M-1/2Carbine
11 USAF Forward Air Controller Caucasian M-1/2Carbine
12 USMC Gunner Caucasian Machine Gun
13 USMC Assistant Gunner Caucasian Tripod
14 USMC Medical Corpsman Afro-American None
15 Army Rifleman Asian-American M-1 Garand Rifle
16 Army Rifleman Caucasian M-1 Garand Rifle
17 Army Assistant Group Leader Caucasian M-1 Garand Rifle
18 Army Rifleman Hispanic M-1 Garand Rifle
19 Army Rifleman American-Indian M-1 Garand Rifle


Mural Wall:

Mural Wall imagesThe Mural Wall was designed by Louis Nelson, of New York, N.Y., and fabricated by Cold Spring Granite Company, Cold Spring, MN. The mural is 164 feet long and consists of approximately 2,400 images depicting Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard personnel and their equipment.

The images are based on photographs, obtained from the National Archives, taken during the Korean War. The photographs were copied to a computer where the images were enhanced to develop a uniform lighting effect and adjusted to appear to be overlooking the statues of the men they supported. The images were etched into the wall using a sandblasting process.

Mural Wall ImageAll names, rank, and company insignia were removed and no records were kept that would allow for specific identification of the images.

The wall is made from Academy Black Granite polished to reflect the statues. The reflection creates an appearance of 38 statues, symbolic of the 38th parallel - the boundary between North and South Korea.

The mural wall is organized by service as shown below:

 

The etchings of the U.S. Army section includes: support artillery, rocket launchers, 240mm self-propelled guns, antiaircraft artillery, projectiles, armored vehicles, tank crewmen, Patton Tanks, M.A.S.H. units, rescue helicopters, surgeons, nurses, ambulances, blood transfusions, stretcher bearers, chaplains representing all denominations, mine clearing, bridge building, road and airfield construction, supply centers, ammunition and fuel dumps, placing communication lines, switchboards and radio communications.

Mural Wall Etching - U.S. Army Tanks     Mural Wall Etching - U.S. Army Engineers

Mural Wall Etching - U.S. Army Chaplins

The U.S. Air Force section includes: air-ground controllers, AT-6's, F-80's, F-86's, P-51's, C-47's, C-97's pilots, crewmen bombs, air evacuation, paratroopers, airborne assaults and aerial re-supply.

Mural Wall Etching - U.S. Air Force Fighters

The U.S. Navy section includes: air evacuation, hospital ships, iron lung, air landing officer, Corsair pilots, submarines, Seabees, landing forces, ships: APA's, AKA's, LC1's, LCVP's.

Mural Wall Etching - U.S. Navy Medical Corps     Mural Wall Etching - U.S. Navy Supply

The miscellaneous section includes: POW handing, traffic control, military police, Red Cross, canine corps, KATUSA's (Koreans attached to the U.S. Army), photographers, reporters and a shrine.

Hibiscus Plantings:

To the south of the Memorial are three beds of Rose of Sharon hibiscus plants. This plant is the national flower of South Korea.

Pool of Remembrance:

Honoring the dead, the missing, the POW's and the wounded from the United States and United Nations Forces ... statistics engraved in stone ... walk out into the pool area on a peninsula symbolic of Republic of Korea, which is a peninsula.

United Nations Curb:

Twenty-two nations responded to the United Nations call to defend freedom and repel the communist aggression...names of all nations are engraved on the curb stone along the north entrance. Seventeen nations provided combat units, five provided medical support.

Honor Roll:

The Honor Roll contains all verifiable names of those on active duty who were killed in action, still listed as missing in action, and captured as prisoners of war in the Korean War (these names come from the National Archives, the Department of Defense and relatives). Those who died elsewhere while in service to their country in the cause of freedom during the Korean War, June 25, 1950 to July 27, 1953, will also be included if family and friends so request and have verifiable data provided to the American Battle Monuments Commission.

History:

On June 25, 1950, the North Korean offensive started from four locations across the 38th parallel into South Korea. In 41 days, the South Korean and American forces would be driven back into the Pusan perimeter, just a few miles from the southern shore of the tip of South Korea. In August, reinforcements from the Eighth Army and Marine Corps would arrive.

By the end of September, the Eighth Army would break out of the Pusan perimeter while Infantry and Marine Corps landed at Inchon and liberated Seoul, the capital of South Korea.

Three months later Marines, forward details from the Army and other British, French, Turkish, South Korean and other United Nations forces would stand at the Yalu River, the border between Korea and China, thinking the war was nearly over.  Soon after reaching the border, a force of 300,000 Chinese troops who had moved into North Korea during the United Nations advance and concealed themselves in the mountainous terrain, attacked the United Nations forces from the rear. The United Nations forces would soon be fighting their way back to the coast to be taken off by the Navy or to secure positions in the south. The next 2-1/2 years of the conflict would become trench warfare or battles for hilltops fought back and forth across the 38th parallel.

During the war. several decisions were made that would set the course of World history. Prior to the conflict, America was disarming from World War II, ignoring the communist threat. After the North Korean invasion, President Truman set the doctrine that no country would fall to communism. It marked the beginning of the end of the Soviet Union and established our industrial base for the next 50 years.

Message: "FREEDOM IS NOT FREE"...Takes legions of men and women who fight a war against oppression ... a memorial of faces, complimenting the memorial of names across the reflecting pool...

"OUR NATION HONORS HER SONS AND DAUGHTERS WHO ANSWERED THE CALL TO DEFEND
A COUNTRY THEY NEVER KNEW AND A PEOPLE THEY NEVER MET"

POC:  Jon Sadler

Updated: 02-Jan-2013