Republic of South Korea 1957-1959

The Challenge to the People After Occupation and War

by William Armour Murdoch


Formats

Hardcover
£20.49
£15.30
Softcover
£10.99
£8.10
Hardcover
£15.30

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 14/12/2006

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 232
ISBN : 9781425983123
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 232
ISBN : 9781425983130

About the Book

The author served in the United States Army Medical Corps in the South Pacific in World War II. Thankfully for America and the now free Republic of Korea America and its’ allies won that war. This allowed us an opportunity to contribute toward The Republic of South Korea’s socio-economic and industrial successes.

The South Korean construction contractor’s management, staff are part of this story.  Under great odds they eventually established a viable construction contractor base.  They performed construction work for the United States Army Corps of Engineers, Far East District building military facilities. Forty-five years ago the author a Civil Service Construction Contract Administrator and his staff helped understand and solve the unique problems faced by our office and the contractors to get the job done under insurmountable challenges.

The capable men and women of “The Seoul Builder’s Club,” and their members should today be proud of their past accomplishments.

This memoir and history is dedicated to “The Seoul Builder’s Club,” of Seoul in the Republic of South Korea.


About the Author

William Armour Murdoch was born in Bents, Stonyburn, Scotland in the year 1922 therefore placing him in the category of an octogenarian, one who has experienced life in Scotland, America, Australia, Japan, Korea and the Philippine Islands.  His has bean a diverse experience that has been within the purview of fate.  From the beginning the experiences provided him as they progressed over time, established an orderly system of beneficial progression.  His past experiences put him in good stead for the next challenge and career change.  Murdoch is surprisingly proud to say that he has no formal academic degrees and is a “generalist.”  This has been a tremendous advantage as a career in a narrow field of academia or work could have been limiting.  He started out as a Clerk Typist and later a Construction Contract clerk in the Legal Branch of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Seattle. He was trained as a Bond and Surety Underwriter and then the Supervisory Contract Administrator for the Far East District Corps of Engineers in Seoul, Korea about which his book tells.  On return to America he became an Employment and Training Administrator for the Department of the Interior, a Job Corps Executive Officer and later functioned in a high level administrative capacity with the Office of Health, Education and Welfare, U. S. Public Health Service, Indian Health about which he has written.  On retirement he became a private consultant in the marketing of Canadian manufactured modular buildings to Native American tribes of Northwest Washington State.  He continues in a consultant capacity in the world of the Native American peoples of Western United States.  He has been honored to work for and relate with many men and women as his mentors in broad ranges of Law, Science, Medicine, Dentistry, Engineering, Social Services and Education to name a few.  He is a writer of poetry, and has published stories “From Across the Pond,” in a Scottish Newspaper.  He offers this memoir and historical book on his unique three years experience in Seoul, Korea from 1957 through 1959.  Enjoy.