For whatever reasons, and maybe I'm off the mark, but I've always felt that Korean war and sacrifices made have been over shadowed by the 2nd World War and Vietnam and probalbly the same could be said about the Great War as well.
I stumbled across a cache of Korean air war pictures and thought I'd pass them along.
http://history1900s.about.com/od/photographs/ig/Korean-War-Pictures/index.htm
I would have thought that the Korean Air war would get more mention considering that it was the first conflict by where military Jet technology was still in it's infancy. And the main combat tactics developed around pistoned engine technology had to be adapted to the new varibles of the now Jet age.
Anyways without further adieu:
With her brother on her back a war weary Korean girl tiredly trudges by a stalled M-26 tank, at Haengju, Korea. (June 9, 1951)
OVER ENEMY TERRITORY IN KOREA -- One of the nine missions assigned to the 315th Air Division (Combat Cargo) is the dropping of paratroopers in airborne assaults. Far East Air Forces Combat Cargo has participated in two such combat assaults: at Sukchon-Sunchon, Korea, in October 1950 and at Munsan-ni in March 1951. Chutes billow out as troopers of the U.S. Army 187th Regimental Combat Team jump from a formation of U.S. Air Force C-46 "Commandos." While airborne assaults took place, other Combat Cargo planes continued the other missions assigned to the 315th Air Division. Besides airborne operations, FEAF Combat Cargo planes have airlifted more than 1,100,000 passengers and 400,000 tons of cargo on the Korean airlift. (circa March 1952)
FEAF BOMBER COMMAND, JAPAN -- Combat infantrymen must know how to do a flat crawl, hugging the ground to avoid being hit. Combat airmen must also know how to maneuver horizontally, only they often do it high in the night skies over North Korea. This U.S. Air force B-29 gunner coming through the 35-foot tunnel connecting forward and rear pressurized compartments on his "Superfort" is A/2C James J. Prater, Beaver Creek Drive, Powell, Tenn. Wearing parachute and "Mae West" life preserver adds to the close sqeeze in negotiating the tunnel which runs through the big aircraft's twin bomb bays. Airman Prater flies nine-hour, 2,000 mile roundtrip missions from his 98th Bomb Wing base in Japan, to attack key Communist targets in North Korea. Airman Prater joined the U.S. Air Force in November, 1951. After training in gunnery at five airbases, he was assigned recently to Japan for combat duty, where his missions are part of the Far East Air Forces' continuing program of blasting Red supplies before they reach. (circa March 1953)
When members of the United Nations Forces moved north over the 38th Parallel into the well-known industrial cities, they found gutted buildings and mounds of twisted steel, that were formerly vital to Communistic Korea's military forces. Targets such as the large marshalling yards of Pyongyang, the oil refinery at Wonsan, and the key Kan-ni Arsenal near Pyongyang, are evidence of the efforts put forth by the U.S. Air Force B-29s flying the long air miles from bases in Japan and Okinawa. Upon request from the United Nations, bombardiers of the huge bombers, paid close attention to pin-pointed military targets, and left surrounding civilian homes and business sections almost untouched. B-29s of the U.S. Air Force drop their 500-pound bombs on a strategic target in North Korea. These planes have devastated enemy North Korean supply lines, industrial areas and troop concentrations with their precision bombing. (circa September 13, 1950)
A dramatic night photo caught the navigator and pilot of a Fifth Air Force B-26 "Invader" of the 3rd Bomb Wing preparing for a night-intruder mission over enemy territory in Korea. They are: 1st Lt. Ben Eubanks, 1619 Westwood Ave., Atlanta, Ga., left, and 1st Lt. Stanley Hyman, 18 Boulevard, New Rochelle, N.Y. An aerial gunner rounds out the crew. (circa June 1951)
A small South Korean child sits alone in the street, after elements of the 1st Marine Division and South Korean Marines invaded the city of Inchon, in an offensive launched against the North Korean forces in that area. (September 16, 1950)
COMBAT CARGO, JAPAN -- Clasping his wife tightly in his arms, aboard a Combat Cargo C-124 "Globemaster" just after it landed near Tokyo, Capt. Zach W. Dean of El Dorado, Kan., the third U.S. Air Force repatriate returned by the Communists, finishes the first leg of his long trip back from a Red prison camp. (circa April 1953)
Lieutenant Colonel John Hopkins, commanding officer of the First Battalion, Fifth Marine Regiment, leads in singing the "Star Spangled Banner" during Memorial Services held in the field during the Korean campaign. (circa June 21, 1951)
BITTER COLD, BITTER FIGHT. While units of the U.S. Far East Air Forces Combat Cargo Command made an all-out effort to aid embattled units of the First Marine Division and Seventh Infantry Division, the men fighting in Korea were trying desperately to link up in their battle for survival. This marine is shown just as he reached the crest of the ridge at the link-up point. Wet, stinging snow and ice made the operation the most difficult sort, as unleashed hordes of communist troops charge again and again into the United Nations forces. (circa December 1950)
FIFTH AIR FORCE, KOREA -- As F-84 "Thunderjets" of the 49th Fighter Bomber Wing in Korea prepare to take off on an interdiction mission against enemy installations, A/2C Jerome O. Etman, at bat, of 203 W. Franklin St., Baltimore, Md., and A/2C Charles F. Hyson, Jr., 2631 Kirk Ave., Baltimore, Md., take part in one of America's most popular sports--baseball. Even though these airmen sometimes work around the clock, arming aircraft with bombs, napalm, and deadly rockets, they find time between missions for recreation. Their unit has logged more than 37,000 combat sorties during a period of two years. (circa July 1952)
A Korean youth, Kim Pak Soon, is taught one of the fundamental lessons of baseball -- "get your glove up, and keep the fingers out of the way." His instructor is S/Sgt. James W. Black, Chicago, Ill., member of the Fifth Air Force's 49th Fighter Bomber Wing. As warm weather approaches, members of the 49th plan to expand the sports program, even in war-torn Korea. (circa March 1951)
AIR WAR IN KOREA. A fond farewell from his family, sends Capt. Johnnie Gosnell of Borger, Texas, off on another mission over Korea. Waving goodbye on the field near their home are Bill, 6, Sharon, 5, and Mrs. Gosnell. Gosnell is a pilot flying with the 68th All-Weather Fighter Interceptor Squadron at an advanced U.S. Far East Air Forces base in Southern Japan. He's getting ready here to take off in his twin-engined F-82 Mustang. (circa November 1, 1950)
TROUBLE FOR ENEMY TARGETS. FIFTH AIR FORCE, KOREA. This U.S. Air Force B-26 light bomber of the 3rd Bomb Wing has its 14 forward firing .50 caliber machine guns tested prior to a night mission against enemy targets in North Korea. Pilots of the 3rd Wing nightly patrol Communist supply routes leading to the front. The B-26 night Intruders have been a major factor in the destruction of more than 53,000 enemey vehicles knocked out by U.S. Air Force units since the start of the Korean war. (circa November 27, 1952)
Leaving a fiery trail, .50 caliber bullets streak through the night as maintenance men of the 49th Fighter Bomber Wing in Korea, test fire a Republic F-84 "Thunderjet." Wing guns will be checked and put in perfect firing order before the plane takes off in the morning on a bombing and strafing mission over enemy lines. (circa August 1952)
A huge jet of flame shoots from the tail pipe of the sleek interceptor and splits the blackness of the Korean night, as the pilot tests his after-burner before take-off. The long finger of flame resembles a giant blowtorch. The after-burner, used to give aircraft additional thrust on take-off, is not actually brought into use until the take-off run has started. It is also used during air operations to increase air speed. The interceptors fly nightly combat missions protecting B-29 "Superforts" from enemy night fighter attacks, patrol deep into enemy territory and remain ever on the alert to intercept any enemy aircraft that might attempt to reach friendly territory. (July 27, 1953)
Bombs Away-Regardless of the type of enemy target lying in this rugged, mountainous terrain of Korea, very little will remain after the falling bombs have done their work. This striking photograph of the lead bomber was made from a B-29 "Superfort" of the Far East Air Forces 19th Bomber Group on the 150th combat mission the 19th Bomber Group has flown since the start of the Korean war. (circa February 1951)
Bomber Command planes of the U.S. Far East Air Forces rain tons of bombs on a strategic military target of the Chinese Communists in North Korea. As part of the stepped-up aerial offensive against the enemy, attacks such as this are staggering the Reds, thus helping UN ground forces to stem the Communist push down the center of the Korean peninsula. The planes blasting the Red hordes are B-29 "Superfort" medium bombers. (circa January 1951)
Navy Sky Raiders from the USS Valley Forge fire 5-inch wing rockets at North Korean communist field positions. (October 24, 1950)
Airborne Mercy -- Whole blood is administered to an airborne casualty, enclosed in a metal capsule attached to the side of an Air Rescue helicopter about to land at an advanced air station in Korea. Medical technician holds life-giving bottle over the wounded man during the 45-minute flight from the front lines. (circa December 31, 1952)
AT FRONT LINES IN KOREA -- Tragedy is again by-passed as another fallen UN soldier receives blood plasma while being gingerly lifted into a stretcher of a U.S. Far East Air Forces H-5 helicopter of the 3rd Air Rescue Squadron. The wounded man will be delivered to rear area medical facilities in a matter of a few moments. (circa May 1951)
BACK FROM THE FIGHTING FRONT. A group of war-weary wounded soldiers stand by while one of their number is lifted from the Air Force C-47 which brought him to this field in Japan from a forward airstrip in Korea. Speedy air evacuation of casualties in the Korean fighting has proved to be a great morale booster as well as a practical means of saving lives in many instances. (July 28, 1950)
Corporal Eader (center with back to camera) reassures a wounded soldier as medics carry him away from Captain Eliasson's copter on a litter. His next stop will be the mobile surgical hospital at a Fifth Air Force fighter strip only a short distance from this "coffee grinder" area. (circa March 1951)
Army medics carry wounded UN personnel to waiting ambulances, after the patients' arrival at this Tokyo base in the U.S. Air Force C-124 in the background. The C-124, the largest cargo plane operating on the Korean airlift, carries as many as 135 patients. Forty of the patients on this flight, critically wounded, were flown to Camp Drew Hospital near Tokyo in C-47's of the Royal Thailand Air Force. The trip, which took only 20 minutes, would have required six hours by road. (circa October 1952)
COMBAT CARGO, KOREA -- A helicopter, carrying two seriously wounded UN soldiers, is about to land gently at a front line airstrip in Korea where the soldiers will soon be placed aboard a Combat Cargo C-54 transport for the flight to Japan. U.S. Air Force and Army hospitals specializing in the type of wounds these men have received are equipped with the knowledge and methods needed to place them on the road to recovery. However, the speed with which wounded are transferred to these hospitals is oftentimes the factor which may spell life or death. (circa June 1952)
KOREA--U.S. Air Force F-86 "Sabre" jet pilot, Capt. Kenneth D. Critchfield, Fort Madison, Iowa, mounts to the cockpit of his deadly, swept-wing jet-fighter to make another sweep of "MIG Alley", scene of many vicious duels between American "Sabre" jet pilots and Communist MIG-15s. (circa October 1951)
Harlingen Army Air Field, Texas -- Elizabeth L. Gardner of Rockford, Illinois, WASP (Women's Airforce Service Pilot) pilot, takes a look around before sending her plane streaking down the runway at the air base.
FIFTH AIR FORCE, KOREA--Capt. Frank W. Corbett, 726 First Ave., Gadsen, Ala., climbs out of his U.S. Air Force 17th Bomb Wing B-26 "Invader" after his final combat mission over North Korea. In full flight gear he symbolizes the pilots and other aircrew members who fly the hard-hitting day and night combat missions in support of UN action in Korea. During his 50 light-bomber sorties into enemy territory, Capt. Corbett and his crew destroyed 150 enemy vehicles, 34 personnel and supply buildings and a bridge. They flew 16 missions against enemy front-line positions in support of UN ground troops, blasting bunkers and gun positions. On Capt. Corbett's final mission the morning of April 10, the crew scored direct hits on five enemy trucks loaded with ammunition, exploding them skyward in a mass of rubble. Capt. Corbett received the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Air Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters, for recognition of his combat service. (circa April 1953)
CLAD IN HIS ARMOR. Normally a good-sized man, Captain Melvin E. Jarvis, 1318 Roberta Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, pilot of a B-29 "Superfort" of the 307th Bomb Group, based on Okinawa, looks gigantic after donning over 105 pounds of flight gear necessary for combat missions. Captain Jarvis is shown at the controls of his B-29 just prior to take-off on a mission on Communist positions in North Korea. (circa May 1951)
20TH AIR FORCE, OKINAWA -- A/2C Don W. Murray of Mazon, Ill., flashes a victory smile from the gun blister of his U.S. Air Force B-29 "Superfort" after shooting down a Communist jet fighter. Airman Murray shot down the enemy jet during a pre-dawn strike against a Red staff school on the west coast of North Korea, October 8. Sighting the enemy fighter approaching from the rear, Murray fired as it attempted to sneak into the bomber stream. After five bursts, the jet broke away and exploded. Murray is a left gunner with the 307th Bomb Wing, based on Okinawa. (circa November 1952)
Looking grim and determined, veteran bomber pilot Capt. Criffis DeNeen, 18405 Patton Ave., Detroit, Mich., veteran of 39 combat missions over North Korea prepares for another. He is assigned to the Fifth Air Force's night flying 3rd Bombardment Wing, Korea; his aircraft is a hard-hitting, U.S. Air Force B-26 Invader light bomber. Night crews of the 3rd specialize in tracking down enemy truck convoys attempting to resupply frontline forces. The B-26s carry a formidable armament load of bombs, napalm, rockets and .50 caliber ammunition, and can locate their targets in darkness or foul weather by radar techniques. (circa November 1951)
98TH BOMB WING, JAPAN -- Pfc. Benjamin Livingston flies as a gunner on one of the U.S. Air Force veteran 98th Bomb Wing's Superforts, defending the B-29 against Communist jet fighters. (circa November 1951)
Capt. Eugene C. Cheatham of Montclair, N.J., serving with the Fifth Air Force's 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing at an advanced Korean airbase, is shown studying aerial photographs taken by photo-reconn aircraft of the 67th Wing. He will interpret the information on the prints, report his findings to higher headquarters, who will assign targets to tactical Fifth Air Force Fighter, fighter-bomber and light bomber units for combat strikes. (circa July 1951)
HQ., 20TH AIR FORCE, OKINAWA --- As take-off time approaches, Airman Joseph Migliardi, 274 King St., Port Chester, N.Y., runs a last minute check on the remote control apparatus of his .50 caliber machine guns. (circa July 1952)
AERIAL BROWNIE. Gun cameras are synchronized with the .50 caliber machine gun fire on U.S. Air Force F-80 jet fighters and record every strike against the North Korean aggressors. Here, Cpl. Harvey Davis, 19, of Redfield, Kansas, inspects one of the gun cameras after an F-80 close support mission. (circa Sept. 1950)
1st. Lt. Walter H. Burke, Stockton, Calif., recently became in good standing of the "Century Flight Club" of the U.S. Air Force's 18th Fighter Bomber Wing. He poses with the lucky white horseshoe, official emblem of the club, at the completion of his 100th F-51 "Mustang" combat mission over Communist targets in North Korea. (circa October 1951)
FEAF BOMBER COMMAND, JAPAN--With his head covered by a fur parka reminiscent of the men of the great Northwest, 1st Lt. Carl L. Hinchey, 1207 Grand St., Duncan, Okla., a U.S. Air Force B-29 "Superfort" pilot with the 98th Bomb Wing in Japan, is ready, in his protective clothing, for another high-altitude bombing attack against Communist targets in North Korea. Because the "Superforts" sometimes bomb from high altitudes, the hazard sub-zero weather at such levels adds to the daily risks through which the medium bomber crews go. To protect them from the elements, special clothing is issued to each man for the high level flights. Lt. Hinchey has flown 15 combat missions with the 98th Bomb Wing. Since July, 1950, when the 98th went into action against the Reds, the medium bombers of the 98th have flown more than 5,500 effective sorties and dropped more than 40,000 tons of bombs on key enemy military targets and frontline positions. (circa January 1953)
Shay
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Semper Fortis