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Photo of the Day

My dad's war.

On September 18, 1950, the tide turned in Korea.

US Army troops at the Pusan Perimeter.

140,000 United Nations troops, whom invading North Koreans had pushed back to the southeast tip of South Korea, broke through a 140-mile defensive perimeter, called the Pusan Perimeter, and began the drive north.

And as they did, 13,000 US Marines, who had gone ashore at Inchon Harbor, on the west coast of the Korean peninsula three days before, began their drive south.

US aircraft conducts light bombing in South Korea to divert attention away from Inchon.

The amphibious landing in the Inchon Harbor, devised by Gen. Douglas MacArthur, came as a surprise.

Navigation there was perilous and required a precise knowledge of high and low tides.

Gen. Douglas MacArthur and other military officials in Inchon Harbor, northwestern South Korea, September 15, 1950.

So, six hours before the landing, MacArthur and others took an unarmed, unescorted boat into the harbor to obtain accurate tidal data.

Landing craft approach Inchon, September 15, 1950.

MacArthur’s tidal information enabled the Inchon landing to proceed with minimal losses.

The next day, the landing force liberated the city of Inchon and began the march south to Seoul, then under enemy occupation.

Landing craft at Inchon Harbor.

These two offensive drives trapped the North Korean invasion force and marked the start of reclaiming occupied South Korean territory.

US troops in Korea.

The Korean War, technically, the “Korean Conflict,” gets little attention now.

The Americans who fought it were old enough during WWII to know what was happening then, but too young to fight.

American soldier in Korea, December 1950.

So, they had collected string and tin cans and watched the sky with binoculars.

US Boy Scouts collect scrap metal for the war effort, c. 1940s.

And waited for their dads and big brothers to come home.

Boys do their part on the home front, 1940s.

Korea was their war.

My dad at Fort Riley, Kansas. He loved his time in the Army.

It was my dad’s war, too.

I’ll see you tomorrow.

— Brenda

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