We only truncate the captions on mobile and only if the are longer than a set number of characters. If I recall, the thinking was that the captions might be pretty long on some galleries and we didn't want to detract too much from the visual experience for readers who just wanted to scroll through the gallery without reading 100% of the text.
I'm glad to hear you enjoyed the gallery even on a phone. Making an image heavy page work well like these is always tricky for mobile, but it's an experience we care about and plan on improving in the future.
I lived by the DMZ for a couple of years in the mid-90s, and being an outdoorsy type, I did some hiking in the hills around Soyo-San, Inchon, and other spots. It's amazing how much the war changed the landscape, even decades later. At the time you couldn't find a single tree more than five or six inches wide, and all of the hills are crisscrosses with old trenches, etc. Inside the DMZ is supposedly a little bit more wild, and there are supposed to be some actual old-growth trees on the north side, but I doubt any westerner could get there to see them. If the North Korean government ever folds, it's right near the top of my bucket list to go take a look, though.
I just recently had the pleasure of visiting Seoul, but was sad to see JSA tours booked about 3 weeks in advance so I did not get to do the DMZ tour.
My grandfather was in the CIA during the Korean War and has quite an interesting perspective. Apparently it wasn't until Eisenhower was elected that North Korea finally was more willing to sign an armstice because, unlike Truman, Eisenhower was happy to drop hints that he was OK with using the atomic bomb to end the war.
Gives an interesting dimension as to why North Korea is so gung-ho about obtaining one. They did not like being bullied with one.
Ah, Korea, the first "Rules of Engagement" war. I wonder what would have actually happened if MacArthur had expanded the war as he planned, before Truman clapped the muzzle on him.
Similar to Vietnam, the suggestion that the US military is ready to take the gloves off and actually fight a real war is usually enough to bring anything less than a first-rate military power to the negotiating table. Well, assuming that the enemy is anything like an actual government with real responsibilities to its people, rather than a decentralized rabble of Islamic thugs.
"I wonder what would have actually happened if MacArthur had expanded the war as he planned, before Truman clapped the muzzle on him."
I like MacArthur, and he is an amazing general. Inchon landing was a remarkable gamble that proves MacArthur is a tactical genius. In my South Korean heart, I want to believe that MacArthur was right. But when I think more about the issue and the historical context behind the war, I think Truman made the prudent choice.
WWII is still very much fresh in everyone's mind. People know even the smallest spark can trail-blaze its way to start the biggest war at an unimaginable. The Korean war should have stayed as a proxy war and ended as a proxy war. I am glad that the war had not spilt itself to becoming full scale war between communist side vs capitalist side. Also US's use of atomic bomb in Japan during WWII was viable because Japan did not have an atomic bomb. USSR did. If US used an atomic bomb against North Korea, that would be an open invitation for USSR to use it. So yeah, I think Truman was right in the end.
Not surprisingly, the hospital photo looks eerily like a set from MASH. I even squinted and saw Henry Blake in the back. I grew up watching the show and it was my earliest exposure to art that was explicitly (and powerfully) anti-war.
These photos bring up a lot of family history for me. Thanks for sharing them.
My mother's family lived in Seoul when the war broken out. During my mother's first birthday party, her aunt and her children came through the door looking half dead. My aunt lived further north and made the few days trek with her children and only the clothes on her back. Her husband was an engineer on a power plant, when the communist party took over. He was taken away by soldiers never to be seen again. My mother's family eventually had to flee as well, losing all their possessions and farmland.
Though my mother was too young for a first hand account of the war, we still have a single photograph of my mother's first birthday party. You can see her sitting in front of all the celebratory food. What you can't see in the picture is my aunt and her children on the other side of the room on the verge of death.
If it weren't for the US's gracious intervention, S. Korea would have been swallowed by N. Korea and China.
Unfortunately some pro-communism, pro-N. Korea activists hate the US. These people have forgotten the grace of the US.
Without US support, S. Korea would still be dirt poor, just like current South Eastern countries.
Indeed. It's surprising to me that the Atlantic chooses not to document the Bodo League massacre. Rhee was a butcher, and our support of him is one of the great moral failings of the Truman administration.
My father fought in this war, came in with the main U.N. invasion, fought in North Korea before being shot a couple times and sitting out the rest in a hospital in Japan trying to beat a new found morphine addiction. He very rarely talks about his time there, but pictures of modern South Korea make him stop in his tracks.
My wife is Korean, and her father and his brother were the only surviving family members from their side. Orphaned at 8 or 9, my father-in-law remembers very fondly American soldiers volunteering time to come to the orphanage and play with the kids, bring them candy, whatever.
It's not entirely impossible that my father may have been one of those soldiers giving my father-in-law chocolate. When my wife and I announced our engagement, my father-in-law felt it was deeply appropriate for the son of one of those soldiers who may have saved his life to marry one of his daughters.
If you want to better understand that kind of bond, I recommend watching this documentary on a reunion between a Korean orphan and her Turkish soldier guardian (the Allies were a U.N. force and Turkey was a major contributor of troops). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98KBGvZymMA
Sometime during the war, in order to slow the southward advancing Communist forces, all of the bridges crossing the numerous rivers in South Korea were destroyed, leaving hundreds of thousands of fleeing refugees to crawl over wreckage and ford rivers on foot. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/dc/Flight_of_Ref...
So rapidly and completely displaced were people, and so decimated the country had been, that families who were separated in the rush away from the war often never found their relatives again. In the 1980s a short run of shows trying to reconnect families swept the nation as people desperately tried to remember the names and faces of their long-lost, hopefully still living, relatives. At one point the show ran for 13 hours a day. Over 10,000 families were reunited -- decades after the war had ceased.
15 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 42.7 ms ] threadAlso try adding scroll-behavior: smooth; to the body or :root
I'm glad to hear you enjoyed the gallery even on a phone. Making an image heavy page work well like these is always tricky for mobile, but it's an experience we care about and plan on improving in the future.
My grandfather was in the CIA during the Korean War and has quite an interesting perspective. Apparently it wasn't until Eisenhower was elected that North Korea finally was more willing to sign an armstice because, unlike Truman, Eisenhower was happy to drop hints that he was OK with using the atomic bomb to end the war.
Gives an interesting dimension as to why North Korea is so gung-ho about obtaining one. They did not like being bullied with one.
Similar to Vietnam, the suggestion that the US military is ready to take the gloves off and actually fight a real war is usually enough to bring anything less than a first-rate military power to the negotiating table. Well, assuming that the enemy is anything like an actual government with real responsibilities to its people, rather than a decentralized rabble of Islamic thugs.
I like MacArthur, and he is an amazing general. Inchon landing was a remarkable gamble that proves MacArthur is a tactical genius. In my South Korean heart, I want to believe that MacArthur was right. But when I think more about the issue and the historical context behind the war, I think Truman made the prudent choice.
WWII is still very much fresh in everyone's mind. People know even the smallest spark can trail-blaze its way to start the biggest war at an unimaginable. The Korean war should have stayed as a proxy war and ended as a proxy war. I am glad that the war had not spilt itself to becoming full scale war between communist side vs capitalist side. Also US's use of atomic bomb in Japan during WWII was viable because Japan did not have an atomic bomb. USSR did. If US used an atomic bomb against North Korea, that would be an open invitation for USSR to use it. So yeah, I think Truman was right in the end.
http://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2016/07/remembering-the-kor...
My mother's family lived in Seoul when the war broken out. During my mother's first birthday party, her aunt and her children came through the door looking half dead. My aunt lived further north and made the few days trek with her children and only the clothes on her back. Her husband was an engineer on a power plant, when the communist party took over. He was taken away by soldiers never to be seen again. My mother's family eventually had to flee as well, losing all their possessions and farmland.
Though my mother was too young for a first hand account of the war, we still have a single photograph of my mother's first birthday party. You can see her sitting in front of all the celebratory food. What you can't see in the picture is my aunt and her children on the other side of the room on the verge of death.
My wife is Korean, and her father and his brother were the only surviving family members from their side. Orphaned at 8 or 9, my father-in-law remembers very fondly American soldiers volunteering time to come to the orphanage and play with the kids, bring them candy, whatever.
It's not entirely impossible that my father may have been one of those soldiers giving my father-in-law chocolate. When my wife and I announced our engagement, my father-in-law felt it was deeply appropriate for the son of one of those soldiers who may have saved his life to marry one of his daughters.
If you want to better understand that kind of bond, I recommend watching this documentary on a reunion between a Korean orphan and her Turkish soldier guardian (the Allies were a U.N. force and Turkey was a major contributor of troops). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98KBGvZymMA
Sometime during the war, in order to slow the southward advancing Communist forces, all of the bridges crossing the numerous rivers in South Korea were destroyed, leaving hundreds of thousands of fleeing refugees to crawl over wreckage and ford rivers on foot. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/dc/Flight_of_Ref...
So rapidly and completely displaced were people, and so decimated the country had been, that families who were separated in the rush away from the war often never found their relatives again. In the 1980s a short run of shows trying to reconnect families swept the nation as people desperately tried to remember the names and faces of their long-lost, hopefully still living, relatives. At one point the show ran for 13 hours a day. Over 10,000 families were reunited -- decades after the war had ceased.
http://www.nytimes.com/1983/08/18/world/war-scattered-korean...
http://www.koreabang.com/2013/pictures/photos-in-1983-all-of...