This official U.S. Marine Corps history provides unique information about an important aspect of the Korean War. Subjects covered in this history include: the 1st Marine Division; Major General Oliver P. Smith; Seoul/Wonsan campaign; aerial medical evacuation; close air support in the recapture of Seoul; marine combat vehicles; Bushmaster; 1950 street fighting.
#3091714 in Books NYU Press 2013-06-22 2013-06-22Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.25 x .56 x 6.13l; .69 #File Name: 1479825239219 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. I'm still reading it but would recommend it for its well-researched presentation of the storyBy J L BI leaned a lot about the culture of slavery that I didn't know before from reading this book. I'm still reading it but would recommend it for its well-researched presentation of the story.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Insightful look into Early American SlaveryBy Robert H. WebbThis was an insightful book into early American Slavery. It clearly illustrates the business of slavery and more fairness in some regards then I would have expected. Well done !0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A Shining Example of Historical ReconstructionBy AfroAmericanHeritageJames F. Brown was born a slave in Maryland and died a free man in Upstate New York. More than a free man - he became a Master Gardener; a husband; a voter; a citizen; a respected member of his community at large and the horticultural community of the Hudson River Valley in particular. And he accomplished all of this in the pre-Civil War period.Armstead has painstakingly teased most of his story from his 10-volume diary (covering the years 1829 - 1866.) Admittedly; in keeping with diaries of the period the journals do not reveal "secrets of the heart" so much as matter-of-fact accounts of daily goings on. But when used with other sources - and one can tell Armstead has meticulously combed through them all - the author is able to create a "historically contextualized reconstruction" of his life that makes for a fascinating story.As the author states in her introduction; this is more than one man's story. It is a reflection upon three national struggles during the period "regarding personhood; regarding work; and regarding democratic association." This theme (combined with the fact that so much of the information about Brown is by necessity well-founded conjecture tempered with qualifiers such as "very likely" and "probably") raises the book to a more academic level; and makes me hesitate to recommend it to the general reader with an interest in horticulture.But I can definitely recommend this book for readers interested both in African American or American Studies and horticulture. And it is a Must Read for anyone planning a trip to the Mt. Gulian Historic Site. Though their web site does have a page devoted to Brown; it really doesn't do him justice.