All three are remembering their connections to the Korean War, as the world marks its 65th anniversary on Thursday.
June 24, 2015 - It was just a pile of old photos from the Korean War. But it turned out to be so much more.For Tiana Stephens, the pictures helped her learn more about a cherished grandfather she'd lost a few years back.
For Harry "Bud" Quehl, they offered a chilling reminder of the friends he lost as a crewman on a B-29 bomber.
And for Betty Perkins-Carpenter, the images allowed her to honor the memory of her beloved uncle.
All three are remembering their connections to the Korean War, as the world marks its 65th anniversary on Thursday.
The images -- more than 100 black and white photos taken by the Department of Defense -- show various scenes from the Korean War, including many unidentified Koreans and Americans. In 2012, a veterans group gave them to Perkins-Carpenter, in hopes she could find out who the people were in the photos and get them to family members.
During the next three years, an amazing chain of supporters stepped up to help ID people in the photos. Their efforts are touching families around the nation.
Stephens first saw the photos on local TV news and thought one of the soldiers looked a lot like her grandfather, Crawford Flynn, who died in 2005. read more>>>
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