Located just north of Seoul and about an hour south of Dongducheon, is the suburban city of Uijongbu. Besides being nationally famous for serving the best budaechigae in the country the city is also home to soldiers of the Second Infantry Division. Below is a graphic of the locations of current and former USFK camps in Uijongbu:

Out of all of these camps only two remain operational today, Camp Red Cloud in the city’s northwest and Camp Stanley to the city’s southeast. All of the remaining camps have been closed since 2005 as part of USFK’s transformation program to reduce the force footprint in Korea. If you look at the map all of these camps used to be on the outskirts of the old city of Uijongbu. However, as Korea prospered economically so did Uijongbu and the camps were completely swallowed up by the surrounding city.
The urban density of Uijongbu played a part in the decision to reduce soldiers and consolidate camps in Uijongbu. After a number of these camps were closed down the anti-US groups started protesting that these camps were polluted wastelands that were a danger to the surrounding Korean community. During a recent visit to Uijongbu, I decided to see what the current status of the camps really is.
The first camp I started at was Camp Red Cloud:

Camp Red Cloud (CRC) is the home to the headquarters of the 2nd Infantry Division and a few miscellaneous associated with the division headquarters. The camp’s namesake is Corporal Mitchell Red Cloud, a Winnebago Indian from Wisconsin that was post-humanously awarded the Medal of Honor during the Korean War. The camp is quite nice and has a busy golf course that is usually over flowing with Korean golfers. I took no pictures from inside the camp since it is still open and have my own policy of not taking pictures inside open USFK camps due to operational security concerns, but here is a picture of the division headquarters from the 2ID webpage:

From CRC I crossed the busy highway in front of the camp and walked down the road through the small “ville” in front of CRC and towards Camp La Guardia. The ville area in front of CRC is not really your typical soldier “ville” in Korea and is more of what you see in a typical Korean neighborhood. Camp La Guardia like many 2ID camps closed down in 2005. The camp is actually built around an old airstrip that originally gave the camp it’s name by being named after La Guardia Airport in New York. Before closing down, Camp La Guardia served as the home for an engineer bridging company because the runway provided plenty of room to park the large engineer equipment. The engineers are long gone and when I approached the front gate I noticed a ROK Army soldier guarding the gate. I asked him if I can take a picture of the camp from inside the gate and he would not let me. So I took this picture later on in the day from Cheonbosan Mountain that overlooks Uijongbu:

From La Guardia I walked down to the Uijongbu train station which sits adjacent to Camp Falling Water. Camp Falling Water used to serve as the home for the Department of Public Works (DPW). DPW is staffed with Korean workers that are responsible for maintenance operations on the USFK camps. Camp Falling Water is a very small camp, more like a collection of warehouses, that was closed down in 2005 as well.
From the train station I caught a bus to Camp Kyle that sits on the northeast side of the city. The camp is named after 2nd Lieutenant Darwin Kyle who was post-humanously awarded the Medal of Honor during the Korean War. This camp was also closed in 2005 and was home to a maintenance company and a quartermaster company when it closed. At the camp’s entrance I once again talked to a couple of ROK Army guards that told me I could not take pictures of the camp because it was Top Secret. For being some place so Top Secret it sure was easy to get a picture by walking over to the nearby pedestrian overpass and taking a picture of the camp from up there:

No that is not a massive oil slick on the camp as the anti-US groups would have you believe, but just water from an earlier rain shower. I did see some ROK Army trucks moving around the camp, but besides that no activity at all. From Camp Kyle I walked along the side of the camp and followed a trail that leads up Cheonbo Mountain behind the camp and took this overhead view of the camp:

Notice that some how all these green trees are some how growing on this polluted USFK camp. From up on the mountain I could also see Camp Essayons which lies on the western slope of the mountain:

Camp Essayons many years ago was once home to an engineer unit that named the camp after the Corps of Engineers motto of Essayons, which is French for “Let Us Try”. Camp Essayons was last home to a military intelligence battalion before the camp also closed down in 2005 as part of the USFK transformation.
From the very top of the mountain I could see Camp Stanley as well, that lies to the city’s southeast on the slopes of Mt. Surak:

Camp Stanley is named after Colonel Thomas Stanley who was killed in a vehicle accident in Italy in 1944 during World War II.
Camp Stanley is currently still open and is mainly a logistical base for the 2nd Infantry Division. Camp Stanley has actually escaped being surrounded by urban sprawl due to the fact that is located right next to a Korean prison and it’s adjacent rice paddies. The Korean prison is the building you see above with the blue roof. From Camp Stanley you can sometimes hear the prisoners singing songs and cadence from the prison. You can often see them working in the prison’s rice paddies as well. The picture below is of Camp Stanley as viewed from Surak Mountain:

Across the street from Camp Stanley you can see the rice paddies the prisoners work in that helps give the area a distinct aroma during the summer months. The quality of life on Camp Stanley greatly improved two years ago with the opening of the new PX on the camp:

Camp Stanley is also home to the only real soldier “ville” in Uijongbu where one can find the typical juicy bars, pawn shops, chicken on a stick shacks, counterfeit clothing stores, coin & plaque shops, and other typical staples of a “ville” in Korea:

Finally, from Cheonbo Mountain I had a bird’s eye view over tiny Camp Sears:

Camp Sears was once home to a headquarters battery of a short-range air defense battalion. The Camp was named after Sergeant First Class Jerome Sears who was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross during the Korean War. The camp closed as well in 2005. While walking down the mountain towards the camp I could see that some how locals were growing crops along the polluted fence line of this USFK Camp:

Quite shocking that locals would be willing to eat crops grown in such polluted soil. I then walked to the front gate of the camp and found no one guarding the camp and was able to take this picture of the front of the camp:

Once again the oasis of green growing in the middle of the dense urban jungle of Uijongbu is quite striking. The fact is that these USFK camps are much cleaner than an equivalent ROK Army base that has been open for 50 years. The camps in general are much cleaner than surrounding communities as well. The camps have plenty of trees and open space that could be turned into useful parks and facilities for the city of Uijongbu. The local government had big plans to turn the camps into parks and administrative centers for the city. Camp La Guardia and Camp Falling Water would have been an excellent locations to turn into a large city park in the section of the city in desperate need of some green space.
However, as usual the outside anti-US groups ruined things for the surrounding community by pushing their bogus pollution agenda. Because of the anti-US groups the hand over of the land was delayed for two years and when the camps were finally handed over, the land was given to the ROK Army instead of the local government. Many people I know in Uijongbu are very upset by the interference of the anti-US groups.
If anti-US groups like Green Korea really cared about the environment, instead of making bogus camp pollution claims, they should be complaining that USFK should clean the graffiti on Cheonbo Mountain overlooking Uijongbu. This faded unit crest is of the old 702nd MSB unit that was stationed at Camp Sears more than a decade ago:

The mountain also has other smaller patches of graffiti from other units as well. Now this is something that I can legitimately see people complaining to USFK to clean up, however Green Korea is silent. It is because the anti-US groups like Green Korea do not care about the environment and instead were formed to promote an anti-USFK agenda that has since been linked to a North Korean spy ring. Creating as many obstacles as possible to prevent the USFK transformation was the goal of Green Korea and their North Korean puppet masters, not any concern about the environment. So in the end the USFK transformation happened anyway and the only people that lost out due to the anti-US groups were the people of Uijongbu.
If you have an interesting or funny veteran story from your time in Korea I would love to hear it. If it is a good story I am willing to publish it here on the ROK Drop. It doesn’t matter what decade you served just as long as it is interesting or funny. If you have a story to share you can e-mail the story to me at gikoreaonline - at - yahoo.com. Thanks for reading the ROK Drop.
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10:06 am on July 18th, 2007 1
Camp Jackson, located in Uijongbu and home to the 8th Army Wightman NCO Academy and KATUSA training, was not mentioned in your post. As far as I know it is still open, training soldiers and will be for as lesat the next year!
11:04 am on July 18th, 2007 2
Great write of the Uijongbu area and the present and past US Army camps. When I was there Camp Red Cloud was home to I Corps and the airfield had aircraft.
1:10 pm on July 18th, 2007 3
That is correct Hugh, Camp Jackson is still part of the “CRC Cluster”
1:57 pm on July 18th, 2007 4
Camp Jackson is part of Eighth Army and outside of both 2ID and Uijongbu by being located in Dobong-gu. I was going to include Camp Jackson in a posting of USFK camps in the Seoul area in a future posting.
2:35 pm on July 18th, 2007 5
See this camp cluster is Uijongbu is actually my pet peeve in Korea.
I have spend time at all these camps in one capacity or another and its a shame to see them neglected so
If you climbed the small apartment building to the left and rear of Kyle you can see clearly they do not take care of anything there. The barracks looks looted (I was one of the first to move into that barracks) and the grounds are unkept. I too was told the grounds at Kyle were top secret but I am not sure why other than they do not want the public to see how clean the place is.
La Guardia is worse…abandoned GI cars still litter the front gate and all the good clubs are gone. One club just closed and transferred its staff to the Vegas club. The other club left open has some strange hours….The grounds are unkept and the Barracks again is looted and the bays are left open all year long
I havent visited Sears yet
Essyones (cant spell that name) is untouched but the sign was removed last year and relocated to Stanley for what I thought would be some sort of momument to the camp but instead it was painted over and now reads something like “Warriors begin here” in some reference to the 2ID Welcome Center (its the sign closest to the closed chow hall)
The other sign in the front of the reception center is the Camp Kyle sign.
I think they are phasing out Camp Jackson
3:47 pm on July 18th, 2007 6
I love reading this stuff, but…
You missed a few more existing and recently closed (in geological terms anyway, and yeah I’m a fossil) installations.
There’s Camp Kwangsa-Ri just north of Uijongbu on the east side of highway 3.
What about Camp Indian (closed early to mid 90s, I think, used to be D Company 44th Engineer Battalion) and North Star Range (might still be open) just to the west of Camp Stanley?
And the old ammo dump (I’ve forgotten the name of it), that was a short distance north of Camp Jackson which was replaced by Camp Kwangsa-Ri in the late 80’s (I think)?
4:49 pm on July 18th, 2007 7
Jerry,
I was going to save Camp Kwangsa-ri for a future Dongducheon posting. Camp Indian is before my time but I think I remember my old Chaplain talking about Camp Indian before. Was it a camp on highway 39 just past CRC? You can tell an old USFK camp was there because of the look of the buildings but it is now a ROK compound. Northstar as far as I know is open but I didn’t include it because it is just a range adjacent to Stanley. As far as a ammo dump north of Jackson I have no idea.
9:12 pm on July 18th, 2007 8
AAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH Kwangsa-Ri is still alive and well and I know because last year I spent 8 weeks there
North Star is still being used….just a couple of days ago I noticed the Red Flag was hoisted by the highway
Never heard of Camp Indian….love to know were it was exactly so I could check it out but I lived in that area in the early 90s and NEVER heard it referrenced
These Ammo dumps are everywhere
Whats interesting to me is all the old camps up in the North area around Musan…..all them have American barracks and gyms but I do not know the former names
9:52 pm on July 18th, 2007 9
I spent a couple weeks on Camp Indian about seven years ago. It was utterly trashed and the buildings were gutted but you could still do some training there at that time.
It was located between Camp Stanley and the small buddist temple that is off to the side as you enter the more central part of Uijongbu. Not sure if it is still there, as it was somewhat off the beaten path, but I believe it was home to an engineer unit.
10:08 pm on July 18th, 2007 10
I think I know what Buddhist temple you are talking about. It must be a small camp because I don’t remember seeing it. Next time in Uijongbu I will have to go looking for it.
10:13 pm on July 18th, 2007 11
I will look for it on Saturday
7:17 am on July 19th, 2007 12
kingkitty,
Leave a comment here of what you find out.
7:07 pm on July 19th, 2007 13
Nice pics and excellent post GI! I used to live right outside the gate of Camp Indian from 1991-1993, and it was still there as recently as three years ago. That area used to be called Mongadae, and I used to ride my bike to and from Camp Stanley every day. If you go out the “prison” gate of Camp Stanley, hang a left and stay on the main road for about a mile. The camp will be on your left hand side. It’s not on the main road though; it sits back off of the road about 100 meters or so and is nestled in a small village. Depending on which way you went up Surak Mountain, you should have been able to see it from there. I used to hike that mountain every weekend. Good times…
8:50 am on July 20th, 2007 14
9:44 pm on July 20th, 2007 15
Camp Indian is (was) toward Camp Stanley from Northstar Range. If you look for US type buildings while driving in to Northstar you should see it (unless it’s been demolished to build high-rise apartments, haven’t been there in quite a while).
Ooohhhh, can’t wait for the Western Corridor version. The DPW at Camp Giant used to have a painted map on the wall from about 1960 which showed a whole slew of US camps (including the name of the camp and what unit was there). Most of them have since become ROK camps. Sure hope someone kept it. I’ve got the 1983 camp list (and locations) memorized, since I used to get to visit most of them regularly (not that I had much choice in the matter at that time).
8:50 pm on July 31st, 2007 16
[...] Divison, USFK lone combat unit in Korea is composed of two main hubs. The first hub are the camps located in the Uijongbu area just north of Seoul. Uijongbu is home to logistical, communications, and command & control [...]
9:09 am on August 11th, 2007 17
I was stationed in korea from august 1966 to sept.1967 and was wondering if any of your contacts can find out where c battery 7/17 arty was located and what the name of the camp was. Its been a long time since i was there and i read that jerry said that there was a map at camp giant painted on a wall with a slew of old camps from 1960 with the name of the camps including the units stationed there.
6:28 pm on August 11th, 2007 18
Victor,
From what I can find out the Headquarters Battery was on Camp Sabre and the firing batteries were on Camp McIntyre. Do these names sound familiar? Here is a map of the area you can look at as well:
http://members.tripod.com/~RickinBham/CSCV.htm
Hopefully this helps.
3:07 am on October 1st, 2007 19
I was stationed at the 3rd Light aviation Section, which was just out side of Camp Red Cloud. At that time it was Hg I Coup. I was there 1961-62. I can’t find anything about it anywhere. I know that when I left in May 1962 there was talk about making it a company. We were the last section in the US Army, I don’t see anything on your map of Uijongbu about it. Are we lost forever ?
5:09 am on October 1st, 2007 20
Arthur,
I have never heard of HG I Coup. If it was near Camp Red Cloud it has probably been covered with buildings now. Can you remember on which side of CRC it was on?
6:09 am on October 1st, 2007 21
GI Korea,
When I was in Korea, Camp Red Cloud was Hq For I coup (Sorry about the HG) The 3rd LAS was about a half mile out of Red Cloud
6:56 am on October 1st, 2007 22
Since it was a light aviation unit I would have to assume that it was probably Camp La Guardia you were on. Camp La Guardia is located about a half mile from Camp Red Cloud and is built on an old airfield. This may be where your unit was located. There is a picture of Camp La Guardia above.
7:22 am on October 15th, 2007 23
7:35 am on October 19th, 2007 24
does anyone know where i can get recent pics, videos, blogs, websites or anything at all on the little ville right outside of camp stanley? i spent a lot of time there in the mid to late 90’s & want to see whats new
8:48 am on October 23rd, 2007 25
I was stationed at Camp Indian 79-80
would love to see what it looks like now…
7:26 pm on December 23rd, 2007 26
[...] The ignorance of this Yonhap reporter Lee Chi-dong who wrote this article is quite evident if you have ever been to Camp Kyle, which judging by Lee’s article, he probably has not. First of all Camp Kyle is not a “vast land” in the heart of Uijongbu. Camp Kyle was one of the smallest camps in USFK which housed only two company sized units. You can see for yourself with pictures of the camp I took earlier this year, which I posted right here on the ROK Drop: [...]
2:10 am on December 29th, 2007 27
I was at Stanley the day it closed, worked at the compound across the street from the main gate. I have been to all the bases mentioned except Indian, but have heard of it. I think you start to think about the memories after these bases close down. Dows anyone know the name of the Ammo Depot on the way up to Caset right off the main road?
5:36 am on December 29th, 2007 28
The ammo depot is camp Kwangsa-ri which you can read about at the below link:
http://rokdrop.com/2007/08/06/camp-casey-korea/
10:58 am on December 29th, 2007 29
Thanks for the info, I ment to say I was at the Camp Sears closing in the last entry. I have been at most camps either working or living, love these short history lessons on the camps.
9:05 pm on February 27th, 2008 30
6:49 pm on February 29th, 2008 31
Memories of Camp Red Cloud and trips to the Ville had long since faded. I’m waiting for a plane at Flint Michigan’s Bishop Airport and it all comes rushing back. For there, sitting in the waiting area for a flight to Las Vegas and glaring at me with that evil look that only a former Kijichon can muster is my old Yobo. Even after 30 years, I still remembered her and the stupid 17 year old kid she married and that guy sitting with her was certainly not him. Time came rushing back and I remembered trips to the Papasan Club and Soju hangovers. Oscar champaign and saw dust burning stoves. For a minute, it was 1975 again.
9:30 am on March 1st, 2008 32
I was in Korea 86-88, stationed at Camp Kyle with the 61st Maintenance Company 86-87 and with the 61st Detachment at Camp Page 87-88.
Wow, things have changed in and around the Northern Corridor. I just found this site and the other Korea site in the past month or so and it has been a trip back in time and an eye-opener concerning the present day.
The ville in Uijongbu, “Jackson Circle” we called it, I lived a truly hedonistic existence. If anyone reds this and was there in that time frame, I was the guy with the “Ville Monster” jacket. I didn’t want the cheesy dragon or outline of the penisula, I custom designed that jacket to match my persona. The jacket is long gone and the memories are a blur but I do know it truly was a single guys paradise…
As far as Camp Kyle is concerned, we were a Maintenance company, wheeled vehicles, radios, heavy equipment, generators, and a tech supply sending out parts to camps all over the area. I guarantee they found nothing more than old oil, nothing of a highly reactive nature was ever brought to Kyle.
4:06 pm on March 8th, 2008 33
There is a temple on the mountain behind Camp Kyle, I hiked up there many times. There are also a couple of Korean War bunkers right below the temple, I checked them out a time or two.
9:21 am on March 14th, 2008 34
I was at CRC in 82-83, Cp Stanley and Cp Kyle in 69, and Cp St Barbara in 1970. Cp St Barbara was up just west of Rodriguez Range on route 37 where it crosses the Hantan Gang (river).
Here is a picture of where it was taken from Google Earth. The camp was turned over to the ROKA in 1972.
[img]http://www.qsl.net/wd4ngb/cp-st-barbara-area.jpg[/img]
I would love to see what it looks like now.
5:58 pm on March 14th, 2008 35
Bruce thanks for stopping by. I have driven by Camp St. Barbara many times before including spending a week living on R228 but never thought to take pictures of the camp. The camp is still occupied and used by the ROK Army to this day. The R228 airfield nearby is pretty run down though. The training area past R228 is used sometimes by US forces and one of my favorite pieces of real estate to train at.
10:54 pm on March 14th, 2008 36
Here is a web page I made about Cp St Barbara. It has pictures from right after the War, to now.
http://www.qsl.net/wd4ngb/stbarbara.htm
I would love to get some recent pictures from the camp area. I really enjoyed the time here, and the beautiful scenery in the area. I walked from Cp. St. Barbara to Unchon-ni, now called Uncheon City, one Saturday. I walked up through the Chinese Tunnel, then went up the back way that goes left just past the tunnel, before Rodriguez Range. This is one of the most beautiful areas I have been to. There is a section that was called the Greek Valley back then. I was told it was called that from a huge battle between the Chinese troops and a Greek unit. On my first tour in 1960-61 I was a truck driver at Camp Casey, and was TDY to Cp. Kaiser (Unchon-ni) for 3 months, so drove this route many times.
If anyone gets any pictures, I would LOVE to see them.
Bruce
11:45 am on March 28th, 2008 37
With F TAB 91-94. Hung mostly at J’s Club and Eagles Club before and after they made the move from outside Red Cloud.
12:25 am on April 6th, 2008 38
HIGH RES PICTURES NOW AVAILABLE OF UIJONGBU IN GOOGLE EARTH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
2:10 am on April 6th, 2008 39
Thanks for posting this. I was at Camp Sears twice…75-76 and 78-79. We created the S’Posed to club and PX because those at Camp Kyle didn’t like us. The only entertainment was playing Liar’s Poker. We changed the old body prep building into a library.
We erected a sign over the front gate that said “Goofy Golf”
as we were G co 702nd Mt Bn. A fuel dump was next door. Hiked to the temple above a couple times. Drank way too much soju. Sick call was at Camp Stanley.
2:13 am on April 6th, 2008 40
Oh yeah, one more thing. We almost went to war after a tree trimming incident on the DMZ. All our trucks were lined up ready to pull out. Whatever happened to ARP of CARP? (Cavoulas(me), mark Abraham, rick Reisner and jorge Planas)
5:19 am on April 6th, 2008 41
NC47,
Thanks the hi-res pictures of Uijongbu on Google Earth are really good. I will have to do a Google Earth posting of Uijongbu sometime.
6:41 am on April 6th, 2008 42
The post brought back a lot of memories. I was in Uijongbu in A Company of the 51st signal Bat from Sept 63 to Sept 64. I remember going on alert when the tonkin incident happened and I had 15 days to go. I wonder where our bat is located on the photo. Been such a long time everything except Rosies is a fog. I do remember the light air field which we used to fly courrier missions to Stanley and Casey and I Corps Arty on a daily basis.
6:53 am on May 2nd, 2008 43
Man, haven’t thought about this stuff in a long while. I was stationed there in 64-65 when there were only two lane roads, foul ditches (pollution???Hah) and dirt paths thru the ‘ville. Ah Rosie’s
11:47 pm on May 2nd, 2008 44
Well, I was in A Company with Capt TS Jones in 63-64. Yes I do remember Rosie’s, Jackson Main, and the alternate area out behind CRC near the 121st evac. Will never forget the value of $2,Belt Buckes, fire extinguishers, and spare tires. What a tour.
7:47 pm on May 16th, 2008 45
[...] patrolling outside the camps. Units at stationed at US military installations in Dongducheon and in Uijongbu were ordered to conduct regular patrols around their installations in search of North Korean [...]
2:28 pm on May 17th, 2008 46
Not far from Cp Red Cloud was Cp Mosier. I believe it was home to a Dustoff unit, but was taken over by the ROK Army in the ’80s.
I have not been to Korea in 11 years, but would like to return if I can find a civil engineer position.
2:12 am on June 10th, 2008 47
Tom Davis
I see you was in the 51ST signial company in 63-64. I was in the 3rd Light aviation section just down the road from the 55th MP’s and 51st sig. in 61-62. I see you remember a air field there, I know when I left in Jun 62 their was talk of making it a Company, because the 3rd LAS was the last section in the US army. I was wondering if the light air field you were talking about was the 3rd Las ?
4:14 am on June 10th, 2008 48
GI Korea:
If you get up to the old Cp St Barbara area this Summer, Please try to get a bunch of pictures.
Bruce
7:32 am on June 21st, 2008 49
I’m enjoying this site. I actually have a hand drawn Eighth Army Engineer map somewhere from the 50s with all the camps in the Western Corridor listed. Now I just need to find it, take a picture and find a way to link it.
6:43 pm on July 10th, 2008 50
7:49 am on July 27th, 2008 51
Was stationed at Camp La Guardia 1967-1968 with the 59th AVN Co. {I Corp] Enjoyed this web site and the pictures. I wish I would have been more of a photog. while I was there.
9:36 am on July 27th, 2008 52
Ed Messmer,
I see you were at Camp La Guardia. I was at the 3RD LAS(Light Aviation Section) just about a mile out side of Camp Red Cloud (I Corp) 1961-1962 when I left in Jun,1962 their was talk about making the 3Rd LAS into a company as it was the last section left in the Army. It was formed during the war. I can’t find any trace of the 3RD anymore. Some have said the they think it was made into Camp Lu Guardia. I was wondering if while you were there anyone ever made coments that this might have been the 3RD LAS before they changed the name? When I was there we had about 30 GI’s and about 12 officers as pilots.
Art Parker
11:25 am on July 30th, 2008 53
Art Parker 59th Aviation Company [Corps] was formerly the 3rd Light Aviavtion Section, which was actvated 19 December 1950. At the same time it was reassigned from 8th Army to the First US Corps. The 3rd L A S was redesignated 59th AVN Co. [Corps] 24 September 1963. The 3rd L A S participated in 8 engagements for which it received battle credits. This was taken from a year book I have from when I was there. it’s been along time since I have seen it, but it did have this bit of history in it. We had about 80 enlisted and about 10-12 Officer/ pilots and 15 KATUSA’s. Another good web site on Uijongbu with pictures and an aerial view of Laguardia is qsl.net/wd4ngb/crc/.htm Hope thi helped out
11:00 pm on August 11th, 2008 54
[...] they are nothing like what you see in the above video. I have posted about the TDC Ville and the Stanleyville before, but the below video gives a better idea of how different the soldier “villes” [...]
7:24 am on August 29th, 2008 55
[...] Due to its strategic location a number of United States Force Korea (USFK) facilities have been located either in or around the city since the end of the Korean War. Uijongbu is the current home of the US Army’s 2nd Infantry Division headquarters at Camp Red Cloud, the division’s logistical base at Camp Stanley, and its Noncommissioned Officer’s Academy at Camp Jackson. The city was also home to other USFK camps that closed in 2005 as part of the USFK transformation plan to reduce US military units on the peninsula and consolidate what remained on the expanded Camp Humphreys garrison south of Seoul. I full posting about all these camps can be read here. [...]