Korean War Veterans Memorial

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Korean War Veterans Memorial
IUCN Category V (Protected Landscape/Seascape)
Korean War Veterans Memorial
Location: Washington, D.C., USA
Coordinates: 38°53′16″N, 77°2′50″W
Area: 2.20 acres (8,900 m²)
Established: July 27, 1995
Total Visitation: 3,214,467 (in 2005)
Governing body: National Park Service

The Korean War Veterans Memorial is located in Washington, D.C.'s West Potomac Park, southeast of the Lincoln Memorial and just south of the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall.

Contents

The Memorial, showing the Pool of Remembrance.
The Memorial, showing the Pool of Remembrance.

The Korean War Veterans Memorial was authorized by the U.S. Congress (Public Law 99-572) on October 28, 1986[1], with design and construction managed by the American Battle Monuments Commission. Construction on the memorial began in November 1993. It was dedicated on July 27, 1995, the 42nd anniversary of the armistice that ended the war, by Bill Clinton and Kim Young Sam, President of the Republic of Korea, to the men and women who served during the conflict. Management of the memorial was turned over to the National Park Service, under its National Mall and Memorial Parks group. As with all National Park Service historic areas, the memorial was administratively listed on the National Register of Historic Places on the day of its dedication.

Statues at the memorial.
Statues at the memorial.
The Memorial from a different angle, with the photographic wall in the background.
The Memorial from a different angle, with the photographic wall in the background.

The memorial is in the form of a triangle intersecting a circle. Within the triangle are 19 stainless steel statues designed by Frank Gaylord, each larger than life size (between 7 feetinches and 7 feet 6 inches), representing a squad on patrol, 15 Army, 2 Marines, 1 Navy Medic, and 1 Air Force Observer, dressed in full gear, dispersed among strips of granite and juniper bushes, representing the rugged terrain of Korea. To the north of the statues is a path, forming one side of the triangle, and behind, to the south, is a 164 foot long black granite wall, created by Louis Nelson, with photographic images sandblasted into it depicting soldiers, equipment and people involved in the war, forming the second side. The third side of the triangle, facing towards the Lincoln Memorial, is open.

To the north of the statues and path is the United Nations Wall, a low wall listing the 22 members of the United Nations that contributed troops or medical support to the Korean war effort.

The circle contains the Pool of Remembrance, a shallow 30-foot-diameter pool lined with black granite and surrounded by a grove of trees with benches. Inscriptions list the numbers killed, wounded, missing in action, and held as prisoners of war, and a nearby plaque in inscribed: "Our nation honors her sons and daughters who answered the call to defend a country they never knew and a people they never met." Additionally, right next to the numbers of American soldiers are those of the United Nations troops in the same categories.

A further granite wall bears the simple message, inlaid in silver: "Freedom Is Not Free".

Engraved on granite blocks near the water pool at the east end of the monument are the casualty statistics for the soldiers who fought in the war.

  • Dead — United States: 36,516 (not the 55,000 figure which had been used for a generation; that included out of theatre deaths during the war period but unrelated to the Korean War), United Nations: 628,833.
  • Wounded — United States: 103,284, United Nations: 1,644,453.
  • Captured — United States: 7,140, United Nations: 92,970.
  • Missing — United States: 664 (defined as of the end of the war, or still unaccounted for? The 664 figure is current), United Nations: 470,267.

The granite wall has 41 tiles and range from 5-12 feet high

  1. ^ U.S. Corps of Engineers, Baltimore district
  • Korean War Vererans Memorial, National Park Service leaflet, GPO:2204—304-337/00178
  • The National Parks: Index 2001–2003. Washington: U.S. Department of the Interior.

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