Photos From the Vietnam War: Lost and Found - Charlie Haughey
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2014.12.24 16:18
Photos From the Vietnam War: Lost and Found
by Charlie Haughey
찰리 호기(Charlie Haughey)는 1967년에 美 육군에 입대하였으며 1968년에 베트남에 파견되었다.
그는 소총수로 복무하며 월남전 사진을 찍어 美 육군과 일반 신문에 게재하였다.
이 강렬한 이미지의 사진은 이제까지 보지 못한 월남전의 한 단면을 보여준다.
찰리 호기Charlie Haughey))는 1968. 3. 부터 1969년 5. 까지 약 2,000매의 사진을 찍었다.
Members of a rifle platoon ready themselves in the field during the Vietnam War.
This is one of nearly 2,000 photographs shot by photographer Charlie Haughey, a member of the Army 25th Infantry division, between 1968 and 1969.
When he returned home, the photographs were boxed up for the next 40 years, only now being rediscovered,
digitized, and made available to the public.
A formation of helicopters from the 116th Division "Hornets".
Soldiers in gas masks pose for Charlie's camera.
A civilian boy rides his bicycle on a barbwire-laden main supply route. Charlie states that many of these civilian children were often carrying information on American forces' whereabouts to Viet Cong forces.
Left side - Charlie: "Pierre Issot was Frenchman born and raised in the rubber plantations of Dau Tieng. He filmed both sides of the Vietnam conflict with 16mm cameras, and made a living selling the footage to press outlets." Charlie encountered Issot on several occasions in the field. Right side - A Vietnamese civilian boy in front of Charlie's lens.
Charlie frequently photographed civilians, with whom he developed a unique and trusting relationship.
Members of a platoon pose with currency and guns captured from a Viet Cong warlord.
Soldiers swim under a bridge in Trang Bang.
Vietnamese civilians.
Left: Vietnamese civilians. Right: Charlie: "The face of those that fought the war."
Photographer Charlie Haughey, in a photo taken by his brother Jim, poses with a Rapala knife.
Soldiers patrol through high grass.
Pock-marked landscape, evidence of B-52 and artillery airstrikes.
Left: An Army Sergeant Major poses for a portrait. Right: A Chinook helicopter brings water to a night laager site.
A medic attends to a wounded soldier.
Charlie regularly shot photos - like this striking portrait - which he knew would never be printed in Army publications.
Soldiers with a monkey on a leash.
Soldiers patrol through a field.
A soldier reading mail.
Charlie Haughey (left) and PFC Terrence Eggen meet for the first time in September of 2014 in Portland, Oregon.
Charlie gifted Terrence with a print - made in Charlie's rudimentary darkroom in a base in Vietnam - of Terrence
in the field. The print was boxed up for 45 years before Terrence took ownership of it.