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Korean War Project Newsletter - July 6th, 2003 (new books mentioned)



Korean War Project Newsletter - July 6th, 2003 
To: mikeyared@yahoo.com 



Korean War Project
P.O. Box 180190
Dallas, TX 75218-0190
214-320-0342

http://www.koreanwar.org/html/newsletter_july_6_2003.html
("_" is an underscore not a "-" hyphen)

===========================================================
Newsletter for July 6th, 2003
===========================================================
Table of Contents

1.  Membership, Bumper Stickers - Pledge Drive
continues
2.  Veterans from Athens, Alabama, build Memorial
3.  Memories from a Memorial - E.G. McKinnon
4.  ANGLICO
5.  This Mailing List Subscribe | Unsubscribe
6.  Bookstore | Film
7.  Monte Vista, CO renames roadway, Korean War
Highway
8.  Imjin Scouts Website, Anniversary
9.  The Kyushu Gypsies Squadron Association
10. Looking For messages
11. List of Veterans picked for trip to Korea - July
27th
12. Sitting Duck Squadron - DESRON9
13. Reunions
==========================================================
1. Membership, Bumper Stickers - Pledge Drive
continues
==========================================================

The Korean War Project continues our Pledge Drive for
Member/Sponsors. 

Our Member/Sponsors continue to make this site one of
the 
longest running Veteran oriented sites on the
Internet. 

For over 8 years (Feb 15th, 1995) the KWP has been
pleased 
to provide key information relating to the Korean War
and 
the DMZ Forces still in Korea.

Between 58,000 to 100,000 persons visit each and every

month.

Please consider assisting the Korean War Project as
you use 
our pages. If you are new to the site, read our "About
the 
Project" to get an idea of who we are.

http://www.koreanwar.org/html/about_the_project_old.html

Do read our original mission in the "Non-Profit"
section at:
http://www.koreanwar.org/html/nonprofit/nonprofit1.htm


We invite you to join up or renew as members, see
below.
http://www.koreanwar.org/html/membership.html 

Here is more info on current Member/Sponsors.

Members:
http://www.koreanwar.org/html/nonprofit/member.cfm

Sponsors: 
http://www.koreanwar.org/html/nonprofit/sponsor.cfm

For those of you who don't really know Hal and Ted
visit
the archived newsletter from last June, 2002 at:

http://www.koreanwar.org/html/newsletter_june_18_2002.html

==========================================================
2. Veterans from Athens, Alabama, build Memorial
==========================================================

I am a former Marine from Athens, Alabama that served
with 
the 1st Marine Division March 1952- April 1953.

I wanted to inform you of the Project that the
Veterans from 
Athens, Alabama are performing to be dedicated
hopefully , 
November 2003. We are constructing a Korean War
Memorial at 
the State of Alabama Welcome Center just over the
Tennessee  
State Line on Interstate 65 South. The monuments will 
contain all the names of the Korean War Veterans from
the 
state of Alabama that were KIA or died as a result of 

combat injuries. We plan on listing all of the POW's
too.

We are building along side the Vietnam Wall that has
already 
been constructed. We are selling brick pavers to be
engraved 
with persons and organizations that have donated funds
to 
help defray the expenses of construction and  a fund
to 
furnish perpetual care. I just thought maybe you guys
would 
like to know about this Project.

Anyone traveling South on I-65 or traveling North can
stop 
by and visit it, there is no charge, we will have
marble 
benches that you could sit down and rest for awhile,
every 
one will be welcome.

Sincerely,
Bobby L. Powers
1004 Lindsay Lane So.
Athens , Al 35613 

==========================================================
3. Memories from a Memorial - E.G. McKinnon
==========================================================

Memories from a Memorial
by E.G.McKinnon audioads@charter.net
Former 1st Cav. Div 1950-51
 
They once walked on a foreign land
Their postures daunt and gray
In eerie form for all they stand
Reflecting where they are today
Piercing eyes of soldiers I once knew
In various racial classes
In ponchos here they are but few
But represent the masses.

Carbines rifles shoulder slung 
No cadence can you hear
No music here is sung

My comrades are all dead I fear
Left behind in a forgotten war
But I see them alive and real
A platoon of statues ? No much more
They are representatives of how I feel
I'm hypnotized my eyes become a blur
I see a reflection of me back then
And my words begin to slur
>From the Korean War these brave and gallant men

==========================================================
4. ANGLICO
==========================================================

I would like to add a piece in hope that you will
print it 
for other Marines to see who were in the Korean War, 
especially one particular unit.

As the Historian and Committee member of the ANGLICO 
Association, part of my duties are to seek out other
marines 
that have serve in ANGLICO during the Korean War. Few
have 
ever heard of us, as the unit was so small, but also
that it 
was not publicized and was very highly trained, far
above 
others, generally about 150 men at most as support
with 
three, seven man teams that rotated on missions.

ANGLICO was made up of Force One based in Camp Catlin,

Hawaii, located on Nimitz Highway, across from Pearl
Harbor, 
outside of Honolulu. The camp was small, only seven
quonset 
huts. The teams of seven men were highly trained, to
go out 
on missions via aircraft and low jumps, and submarines
and 
destroyers utilizing rubber rafts to land on the
coast, 
hopefully unnoticed to complete our mission and then
escape 
on a destroyer or a sub. Most missions were of the
kind 
wherein no-one accepts responsibility later.

Additionally, there were teams stationed with Hqtrs
Cos., 
Brigades, Regiments and Divisions across Korea. The
teams 
were not only forward recon, but served to bring in
visually 
directed air strikes on the enemy from close up
positions, 
and to bring in Naval Gunfire from the battleships 
off the coast.

We have been seeking these men who served in the units

whether out of Camp Catlin or in one of the other
units 
stationed only on Korean soil.

Please post this notice of our seeking all the
survivors.
They can email me at dr@snim.reno.nv.us or write to me
at 
PO Box 2428-6270
Pensacola FL 32513.

We are looking for all the information possible,
names, 
dates, battles, TADs, buddies and any other recalled.

We are having a reunion in Washington DC this coming
August 
15-17.

Semper Fi

Horace Johns
Gy Sgt 
Historian ANGLICO

==========================================================
5. This Mailing List Subscribe | Unsubscribe
==========================================================

We began this newsletter mailing in December of 1998.

This list is a private list for our visitors and
members. 
A person may join or leave the list at will. It is
compiled from our Guestbook and is for public service
messages of general interest to veterans and families.

To join or leave the list: email to:
Ted Barker tbarker@kwp.org

with Subscribe or Unsubscribe in the subject line. 

Note: if you received this from us directly, you are
already
subscribed. Consider forwarding the Newsletter to your

friends.

Many of our older newsletters can be found below:

http://www.koreanwar.org/html/newsletter_archive.html

==========================================================
6. Bookstore | Film
==========================================================

===a.===

HONOR CLEAN
by Bill Barry

It's a new book about the Korean War, and it has some
things 
to say to Americans preparing for war today. Heed the
past 
or repeat it. The story covers the entire war, while 
focusing on daily life and death of Marines during the
most 
brutal months between the Chosin Reservoir and the 
establishment of the MLR. 

The book was prompted by charges of murder leveled
against 
GIs at NoGun-ri, the Naktong River, and elsewhere. A
couple 
of old ex-Marines stand up for the accused GIs, and in
the 
course of that story, they tell (in flashbacks) the
real and 
true story of the war, destroying some fanciful
historical 
beliefs in the process. 

No phony poetic lyricism, this is a story of how it
was. 
HONOR CLEAN is dedicated to the men and boys who
fought the 
Korean war, and it was written by one of them, a
19-year-old 
platoon sergeant with the !st Marine Division at that
time. 

Full descriptions of the book are available at web 
bookstores such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Just go
to the 
title and click icons (Cover, title, other) for
further 
information. Hope you'll be interested enough to check
it 
out. I'm told the book is an education, as real as
being 
there, which is what I wished it to be. 

Thanks and domo arrigato for the work you are doing on

behalf of the Forgotten Generation. 

Bill Barry    Bbarry2wheels@aol.com

===b.===

Ready to Fire  
Memoir of an American Artilleryman in the Korean War 

Richard B. Holmsten

Thanks for keeping me on your notice listing. I was in
the 
8th FA 25th Div. December 1950 to September '51. 

I will soon be able to announce the printing of 
"One Soldiers War," my story of the life and
activities of a 
small group of enlisted men during this time in Korea.


To be published Fall of 2003

MacFarland Publishers
ISBN: 0-7864-1613-0
[200]pp. photographs, maps, index $29.95 softcover
2003

http://www.mcfarlandpub.com/action.lasso?-db=Promodat.fp3&-la
y=Viewing%20Layout&-format=record%5fdetail.htm&-recid=33276&-
find
(cut and paste the entire phrase, above)

Dick Holmsten
Roseville, MN.

===c.===

My father-in-law recently completed an historical
novel 
based on his Korea experience. It's called "Knights in

Shining Armor", by Dr. Aubrey Sher, by 1stBooks.
See his web site http://www.geocities.com/aubreysher/
 
Besides being a great story, this gives a perspective
on the 
war that not only Americans who lived through it could

appreciate, but also younger folks too.
 
I highly recommend it.
 
Sincerely,
 
Richard C. Bernhardt
5665 Sheffield Place
Melbourne FL 32940
Rbernhardt@cfl.rr.com


===d.===

Notes from an Airborne Rifle Company 1950-1951
by Robert T Brown

A collection of 22 independent but related sketches
based on 
the author's experiences in an airborne rifle company
during 
the first year of the Korean War 

ISBN 1-4120-0022-X

is now available online at:
www.trafford.com/robots/03-0385.html

or toll-free:
1-888-232-4444 (US and Canada)


===e.===

The Riley Factor and The Riley Connection

Within the year, I sent you a copy each of two novels
--The 
Riley Factor and The Riley Connection.  

While both books are essentially mysteries, they both
have 
flashbacks to Korea Cease Fire and duty on the
DMZ-First 
Marine Division.  

Chapter One of The Riley Factor is a fictional mystery
of a 
killer loose on the Outpost Line of Resistance.  The 
conditions and units involved are accurate as told
through 
the eyes of Baker Forward Observation Team One
(B-1-11) 
attached to George Company, Third Battalion, Fifth
Marines.  

Sincerely,
Ernest Donney lbowles@pe.net

==========================================================
7. Monte Vista, CO renames roadway, Korean War Highway
==========================================================

Frank Montijo writes:

Monte Vista, Colo.   24 / 27 July 2003 

Going to rename a highway " Korean War Highway " 

Hope that you can get the word out. 

Frank  Eandfmontijo@wmconnect.com

==========================================================
8. Imjin Scouts Website, Anniversary
==========================================================

Hello Imjin Scouts and Friends,

It has been quite a while since I sent out a
newsletter but 
I think I do have a few things worth mentioning.

To start with, http://www.imjinscout.com celebrated
its 
first anniversary in May.  The site is averaging over
300 
visitors a day.  The homepage counter rolled over
20,000 
last week.  Many of you have contributed pictures and 
memorabilia to the site.  Without your support, the
site 
would never have been successful.  I am proud to say
that 
there are no pop-ups, no animated gifs, and no
requests for 
monetary donations. Many thanks to those of you who
have 
shared your photos and memorabilia with the site. We
have 
many new individual contributions and  they are now
better 
organized on the "CONTRIBUTIONS" page at: 

http://www.imjinscout.com/Contributions.html

Happy Fourth of July and,
KEEP UP THE FIRE!

Don Lopez
July 4, 2003

==========================================================
9. The Kyushu Gypsies Squadron Association
==========================================================

Dave Jordan sent us an updated website link. Great
pictures:

http://www.pbase.com/goldwing/gypsy_6461st

==========================================================
10. Looking For messages
==========================================================

Everyday the messages come into the site, "Looking
For".
We periodically post a couple of those messages to
garner 
interest among our site visitors.

We ask that you help connect or provide info for those

posting.

===a.=== 

542 Med Clearing Co
 
Could you please include the following message in your

newsletter or website or both:
 
My name is Harold Drevecky.  I served in Korea from
August 
1952 to December 1954.  I was a member of the 542nd
Medical 
Clearing Company (Sep), 8th Army.  I was a Sgt in the
1st 
platoon that was stationed up at Whatchon during the
spring 
and summer of 1953.  I am hoping to contact anyone who

served with me in that unit.  Contact me at 
drevecky@earthlink.net or write to: 
 
Harold Drevecky
2747 36th Ave. SW
Seattle, WA  98126   

===b.===

Dear mr Barker:

My name is Amy Lynn Higley and I am the daughter of
Corpl 
Billy D Brandenburg and the reason I am writing to you
is to 
find out if you have any information on any buildings
that 
were named after my dad who served in the 179th
infantry 
brigade and the 45th infantry division.

Bill also earned three purple hearts and my mother
only has 
two of them how can I get the third one. from the
paper work 
that I received from the NARA. Bill was quite a hero
over in 
Korea. 

I hope that you could or can help me with this for my
mother 
would like to know too. 

Sincerely,
Amy Lynn Higley   lynnhigley1963@yahoo.com 

See: http://www.koreanwar.org/html/looking_for.html

==========================================================
11. List of Veterans picked for trip to Korea - July
27th
==========================================================

Stu Rothman, editor of the Buffalo Bugle, 17th Inf Rgt

writes:

http://korea50.army.mil/korea_trip_selectees.shtml

==========================================================
12. Sitting Duck Squadron - DESRON9
==========================================================

We are trying to locate and contact former members of
the 
Korean War who served aboard the following destroyers:
USS 
DeHaven (DD-727), USS Mansfield (DD-728), USS Collett 
(DD-730), USS Lyman K. Swenson (DD-729), USS Henderson

(DD-785) and USS Gurke (DD-783).  The destroyers
comprised 
Destroyer Squadron 9 (DESRON9) and became known as The

Sitting Duck Squadron, for their pre-invasion assault
on 
Wolmi-Do Island at Inchon, Korea on September 13,
1950.  
These six ships received the Navy Unit Commendation
for 
their bravery and heroism on this historic day. 

We like to locate veterans of DESRON9 to determine
potential 
interest for organizing a Sitting Duck Squadron
Reunion, to 
be held in 2004 at a yet to be determined location in
the 
United States. 

Interested veterans may write, call, or E-mail either:

       William H. Barnes III                          
      
    
       2 Williams Dr.                                 
      
         
       Annapolis, MD 21401-2215                       
      

       Telephone: (410) 263-2006

       Richard A. Bowman
       5007 S. 1800 W.
       Roy, UT 84067-2988
       Telephone: (801) 774-9098
       E-Mail: rbowman866@aol.com

==========================================================
13. Reunions
==========================================================

The KWP gets lots of reunion notices. Many are posted
to
the Reunions section and others in specific unit pages
on
Looking For.

Here are a couple notices:

===a.===

Dog Company Reunion - 223rd Inf. Regt. - 40th Division
     8th Biennial Reunion 
     Silver Legacy Hotel/Casino --  Reno, Nevada
     May 17, 18 @ 19th, 2004
     Room Rates --- $52
     Business Meeting -- May 18th, 2 P.M.
     Banquet Dinner & Program --  May 18th,  7 P.M.
     More Information Contact:

     Keith A. Maggini
     2970 Spring View Ln.
     Placerville, Ca. 95667
     Phone -- (530) 295-1257
     E-mail -- kmaggini@hotmail.com


===b.===

187th RCT Replacements

I received your newsletter from a friend. I am the
founder 
of the 320th AFA Association and Vice Chairman of the
508th 
Chapter of the 82nd Airborne Division.  I was in the
320th 
Airborne Field Artillery / 508th Airborne Regimental
Combat 
Team 51-56. Our unit never went to Korea but we
supplied 
MANY TROOPERS to our Sister Unit the 187 ARCT as 
replacements. 

First and foremost we would like to let all your
readers 
know that we are looking for these Troopers or the
families 
of these Troopers that went to Korea to join us in our

reunions. We have accounted for and have addresses on
nearly 
4,000 living and deceased Troopers. We are having a
Reunion 
in Fort Campbell KY 25-28 September 2003 and would
like to 
know how to put an announcement in your Newsletter to
let  
more Troopers know of this Bi-Annual event. Thank You,
Rodger Jacobson
 
Rodger Jacobson Chapter
320th AFA Association
Box 14
Hazel Green,WI 53811-0014
608-854-2317


View Reunions at:

http://www.koreanwar.org/html/reunions.html

Thanks to all who have made this possible.

Hal and Ted Barker

Korean War Project


 
 


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