Photo by George L. Winship, Editor
Ken Green, founding commander of the Korean War Veterans Association, Chapter 1, in Northern California, joins Dick Adams, first national commander of the organization as well as Leroy Neuenfeld, local chapter treasurer, in unveiling a 5-foot tall black granite slab that will serve as a memorial for "Korea, the Forgotten War -- Remembered." The memorial was dedicated Saturday, Nov. 21, 2009, at the Northern California Veterans Cemetery in Igo.
The Korean War Veterans Association, Northern California Chapter #1, dedicated a Korean War memorial at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 21, at the Northern California Veterans Cemetery located at 11800 Gas Point Road in Igo.
More than 200 people attended the nearly two-hour ceremony under sunlit, cloudless skies with fresh snow capping the surrounding hilltops, causing some Korean War Veterans and South Korean-born Americans to compare the south Shasta County scenery with South Korea.
Refreshments were served at VFW Post 9650, 2310 W. Center St. in Anderson following the ceremony.
Bill McKinney, current commander of the local Korean War Veterans Association, served as master of ceremonies and introduced speakers including U.S. Representative Wally Herger, California State Assemblyman Jim Nielsen and Shasta County Korean community leaders Kim Chamberlain and Sung Kim.
The Redding Riverside Chorus provided musical entertainment and sang the U.S. national anthem while South Korean exchange students Jungmin Kim, 19, and Yeji Mun, 22, dressed in traditional Korean style, sang the Republic of Korea national anthem.
The keynote address was provided by former California State Senator K. Maurice Johannessen, who also served for several years as California's Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
During his welcoming remarks, McKinney remembered the day, June 25, 1950, some 59 years ago, when he, as a U.S. Air Force pilot serving occupation duty in Japan, was summoned to evacuate American diplomatic and civilian personnel shortly after the Chinese and North Korean armies invaded South Korea.
"We are here today not to celebrate war, but to remember those who sacrificed and served their country during a time of war to defend those they did not know in a land they had probably never heard of," McKinney said.
"It was a war that historians didn't want to dignify by calling it a war. Instead they referred to it as a 'police action' or a 'conflict' since the war ended in a stalemate that continues today," Nielsen said during his remarks.
Recalling that many Korean War veterans consider their efforts and sacrifices as forgotten by most Americans, Rev. Don Mangrum said, "Forgotten war? Never! Not as long as there is one survivor left standing."
Ken Green, the founding commander of the nation's first-ever Korean War Veterans Association chapter, based in Anderson, led three other chapter officers to the canvas-shrouded monument and unveiled a 5-feet tall, 3-feet wide black granite slab that is slightly more than six inches thick from top to bottom.
Gold lettering inscribed into the polished face of the slab tells the story, and white, red and blue lines etched deeply into the stone depict the U.S. and Korean flags fluttering on either side of a map of the Korean peninsula with prominent cities marked as well as the current DMZ (demilitarized zone) that separates North and South Korea.













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Comments » 1
bettyme2#204302 writes:
I just read the article on the Korean War Memorial Dedication. It was a well written and well covered article. I am extremely proud that this was done for those who gave their lives and service to this country and got slapped in the face when they came home and literlly shamed by their fellow Americans. I would like all of them to know that they have NOT been forgotten and should hold their head up high. To serve God and Country is the highest honor one can achieve and they did both.
On that vein of thought, I would like to send an invitation to all that read this. The invitation is to donate a jacket, a sweater, gloves, blankets, sleeping bags, socks, good shoes still wearable, knit hats or earmuffs/flaps or any personal items you may be able to provide. These articles are being collected for those who came home and are now out on the streets. Some by choice, others not so. I am ashamed to say there are thousands of our Vets trying their best to live out there. They won't ask for help. They are too proud for that. I know this, they know this, but I'm not afraid to ask for help for them.
Please help me to help them. I will get the items to them. e-mail me at JacketsforVets@gmail.com for information on drop off points in Anderson and Cottonwood.
God Bless and Merry Christmas.
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