Table of Contents
			
				- Korean War Summary
 
				- Office of Veterans Affairs Statistics - 2000
 
				- U.S. Census Bureau Statistics - 2011
 
			 
			 
            Korean War Summary
            
              - June 25, 1950 - July 27, 1953
                - Total who served in all Armed Forces: 5,720,000
 
               
               
              - Unique Health Risks
                - Cold Injury
 
                - Lasting Effects
 
               
               
              - Battle Deaths: 33,652
 
              - Wounded: 103,284
 
              - Medals of Honor: 131
 
             
             
			Statistics 2000
            
              [KWE Note: Year 2000 facts were generated by the Office of 
				Veterans Affairs, not the Korean War Educator.] 
             
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            Dates Defining the Korean War and Era
            
              - Korean War (actual hostilities): June 27, 1950 to July 27, 1953
 
              - Official Korean War Era: June 27, 1950 to Jan. 31, 1955 (The extended period was designated by 
              Congress to define a period of eligibility to include a period of uneasy peace negotiations following 
              hostilities.)
 
             
            Korean War/Era Veterans - Then
            
              - 6.8 million served on active-duty during the Korean War Era, making them veterans of the war, the war 
              era, or both.
 
              - 997,000 also served during WWII, 347,000 during the Vietnam War and 291,000 during all three wars.
 
              - 1.8 million served in theater during the three-year period of hostilities.
 
              - 4 million served elsewhere in the world during the period of hostilities.
 
              - 36,940 died in theater during the era — 33,665 from battle wounds and 3,275 from causes unrelated to 
              battle.
 
              - Of the 33,665 battle dead, 23,898 were determined Killed In Action, 2,536 died from battle wounds, 
              4,793 died while Missing In Action, and 2,438 died while prisoners of war.
 
              - 17,320 U.S. military service members died elsewhere in the world during the Korean War Era.
 
              - More than 92,100 U.S. military service members were wounded in theater, some multiple times, 
              accounting for more than 103,200 incidents in which U.S. personnel were wounded.
 
              - 8,176 are listed as Missing In Action (bodies not recovered). This number is subject to change as 
              remains are identified.
 
              - 7,140 were POWs, of whom 4,418 returned, 2,701 died in captivity, and 21 refused repatriation.
 
              - 131 have been recipients of the Medal of Honor.
 
             
            Korean War/Era Veterans - Now (in mid-calendar year 2000):
            
              - There are approximately 3.9 million Korean War Era veterans in the U.S. and Puerto Rico, down about 21 
              percent from the nearly five million living in 1990.
 
              - Korean War Era veterans make up nearly 16 percent of the 24.4 million total living veterans.
 
              - Approximately 86,000 are women.
 
              - Some 848,000 also served in other wartime periods.
 
              - The median age of Korean War Era veterans is 69, with 336,500 under age 65, 3.25 million age 65 to 74, 
              and 363,600 age 75 or older.
 
              - The five states with the most Korean War Era veterans are California (431,000); Florida (294,000); 
              Texas (243,000); New York (220,000); and Pennsylvania (201,000). The numbers reflect the geographic 
              distribution of the overall general veteran population.
 
             
            March 1999 Current Population Survey:
            
              - The median personal income of male Korean War Era veterans in calendar year 1998 was $24,000, compared 
              to $17,900 for male non-veterans age 65 to 74. Their respective median family incomes were $38,000 and 
              $31,100.
 
              - About 36 percent of male Korean War Era veterans had a family income below $30,000, while 35 percent 
              had a family income in excess of $50,000.
 
              - The respective percentages for non-veteran males age 65 to 74 were 48 percent under $30,000 and 29 
              percent with $50,000 or more.
 
              - About 18 percent of Korean War Era veterans had less than a high school education, while nearly half 
              had at least some college. For male non-veterans 65 to 74, the comparable percentages were 33 and 37 
              percent, respectively.
 
              - Nearly 30 percent of male Korean War Era veterans had jobs, but the remainder were no longer in the 
              labor force. Among male non-veterans age 65 to 74, 20 percent had jobs and 80 percent were no longer in 
              the work force.
 
             
            Between July 1999 and June 2000:
            
              - An estimated 117,600 Korean War Era veterans died. Their number is projected to decrease by nearly 
              half from the 1990 Census count of 4.9 million to 2.5 million in 2010.
 
             
            Korean War/Era Veterans and Health Care (according to VA’s Patient Treatment File and the Outpatient 
            Census for FY 99):
            
              - Of all unique inpatients discharged from VA medical centers, 58,400, or 16 percent, were Korean War 
              Era veterans.
 
              - Of all VA hospital inpatient discharges, 95,000 were Korean War Era veterans. (Note: a unique patient 
              may have more than one discharge from a hospital during the fiscal year.)
 
              - Of all unique patients treated in outpatient clinics, 466,700, or 15 percent, were Korean War Era 
              veterans.
 
              - There were about 35 million visits to VA outpatient facilities in FY 1999. Of these, 5.1 million, or 
              15 percent, were by Korean War Era veterans.
 
             
            According to the March 1999 Current Population Survey:
            
              - Nearly 75 percent of Korean War Era veterans percent had some kind of private health insurance 
              coverage, only 3 percent had no health insurance and 22 percent had Medicare or Medicaid only.
 
              - Three-fourths of Korean War Era veterans described their health as "good," very good," or "excellent," 
              compared to 66 percent of male non-veterans age 65 to 74.
 
              - Only 9 percent of Korean War Era veterans described their health as "poor," compared to 11 percent of 
              their non-veteran counterparts.
 
             
            Korean War/Era Veterans and VA Benefits
            
              - Of 2.3 million veterans receiving service-connected compensation at the end of March 2000, 172,600 
              were Korean War Era veterans.
 
              - Of the 370,200 veterans receiving non-service-connected pensions at the end of March 2000, 86,300 were 
              Korean War Era veterans.
 
              - Of the nearly 605,900 dependents of veterans receiving survivors' benefits at the end of March 2000, 
              71,000 were survivors of Korean War Era veterans. More than 90 percent of the 71,000 were surviving 
              spouses. 
 
             
            By the end of FY 1999, a cumulative total of:
            
              - About 2.4 million Korean War Era veterans received education and training under the Veterans 
              Readjustment Assistance Act of 1952 — the Korean Conflict GI Bill. Of these, 1,213,000 received training 
              in institutions of higher learning; 860,000 were trained in other schools; 223,000 received on-the-job 
              training; and 95,000 received institutional on-farm training.
 
              - More than 1.8 million Korean War Era veterans have used VA's Home Loan program to purchase homes, for 
              which VA guaranteed more than $32 billion in mortgage loans.
 
              - Nearly 79,000 disabled Korean War veterans have received vocational rehabilitation training through 
              VA, which helped them find new jobs because their disabilities prevented them from resuming their former 
              jobs.
 
              - More than 803,000 Veterans Special Life Insurance (VSLI) policies for Korean War Era veterans with a 
              "face value" (death benefit) of $7.4 billion. Currently there are some 234,000 VSLI policies in-force with 
              a face value of $2.7 billion. VA paid $184 million to VSLI beneficiaries in 1999.
 
              - 9,800 Korean War veterans were interred in VA national cemeteries, representing 18 percent of all VA 
              interments of veterans in FY 1999.
 
              - In FY 1999, VA provided more than 60,000 headstones or markers for the graves of Korean War Era 
              veterans not in cemeteries managed by VA.
 
             
             
			U.S. Census Bureau Statistics - 2011
			
				- The number of military veterans in the United States: 21.5 
				million
 
				- The number of female veterans: 1.6 million
 
				- Minority veterans:
					- Black - 2.3 million
 
					- Hispanic - 1.2 million
 
					- Asian - 264,l695
 
					- American Indian or Alaska Native: 153,223
 
					- Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander: 27,469
 
					- Non-Hispanic white - 17.2 million
 
					[Note: The numbers for blacks, Asians, American Indians and 
					Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific 
					Islanders, and non-Hispanic whites cover only those 
					reporting a single race.] - Source: 2011 American Community 
					Survey 
				 
				 
				- The number of veterans 65 & older: 8.2 million
 
				- The number of veterans under age 35: 1.8 million
 
				- When they served:
					- Vietnam-era - 7.5 million
 
					- Gulf War (representing service from August 2, 1990 to 
					present): 5.1 million
 
					- World War II (1941-1945): 1.8 million
 
					- Korean War (1950-53): 2.4 million
 
					- Peacetime only: 5.4 million
 
				 
				 
				- Number of living veterans who served during the Vietnam era 
				and both Gulf War eras and no other period: 7.5 million
 
				- Other living veterans who served during three wars:
					- •43,942 served during World War II, the Korean War and 
					the Vietnam era.
 
					- Living veterans who served during two wars and no other 
					period:
 
					•876,663 served during both Gulf War eras. 
					•205,205 served during both the Korean War and the Vietnam 
					era. 
					•129,972 served during both World War II and the Korean War. 
				 
				 
				- States with 1 million or more living veterans in 2011:
					- California - 1.9 million
 
					- Florida - 1.6 million
 
					- Texas - 1.6 million
 
				 
				 
				- Number of veterans with a service-connected disability 
				rating: 3.5 million. Of this number, 810,245 have a rating of 70 
				percent or higher. Severity of one's disability is scaled from 0 
				to 100 percent and eligibility for compensation depends on one's 
				rating.
 
			 
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