Taipei Air Station - 1966 - - - " What you have in the end are memories"......... Photo Courtesy of Richard Reesh.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Can You Help With A Name?

I have a number of photographs of this park. The folks who sent in photos called it Central Park. It is a beautiful place.

I Googled "Taipei Central Park" with results listing Daan Forest Park as Taipei Central Park, Taipei's newest park.

Please help me identify this location and it's name today.

Thank you.



Saturday, August 30, 2008

Earlier Days at Taipei Air Station

George McAdams was 8 years old when he arrived in Taipei in May 1958.

He recalls those early years in Taipei.

While I was only 8-10 years old, I can remember many aspects of Taipei, and one of them was Taipei Air Station.

My father, Lt. Col. C. A. McAdams, worked in the Comptroller’s Office at the Presidential Office Building (second floor, second window from the right when you looked at it from the front).

In reading your articles, I didn’t remember much about TAS, thinking first that the acronym was for Taipei American School, but when I saw the picture of the movie theater, that was something I really remember. We actually saw THE TEN COMMANDMENTS there, which because only a one reel player was used, and the film sometimes came unwound, made the 4 hour movie a 6-hour extravaganza!

During our first year in Taipei, we lived in the compound of about 7 different houses built by a Chinese Major General. Near our house Roosevelt Road broke off from another street I believe it was Wan Sheng Street.

Wan Sheng Street. went by “Army Hill,” a Chinese Army bunker in a huge hill that had a white mountain goat-type animal (with long straight black antlers) tied to a tree at the top. Occasionally, we would think about sneaking into Army Hill compound, but the electrified barb wire just above the water in the moat usually stopped us. I do think we shorted out the circuit a few times when we threw a wet log onto the fence.

About “Army Hill,” that’s was just what I thought the kids called it, but one day 30 years later, I was talking to a fellow who coordinated the satellite stations for the USA. We were at a ballgame killing time, and he noticed I didn’t have a southern accent, and I told him about living in various places, including Taipei. He said he had just been to Taipei. I told him about living near the University near a place we called “Army...” And, he finished my sentence by saying “Hill.” I asked him, “Do they still....” and before I could finish that sentence, he said, “Yes, there is still a goat on top of the hill.”

If you turned to the left just after Army Hill, you went down along a binjo ditch and came into the houses. They were grouped in twos, for the most part, with a common wall. Our house was a pretty solid house. We shared a wall with the Chinese Major General, whose family was extremely nice in that they allowed me to scale the wall between our houses almost any time of day or night.
Near our house there was a Chinese Army pom-pom gun installation. I believe it was a “105mm” twin gun.

As an 8 and 9 year-old American boy, I used to go over there, and the soldiers would let me get into the seat and operate the gun (however, they never let me slide the red switch cover over the trigger and fire it. Once I actually got to be the gunner during their monthly alert when a plane circled Army Hill. If that pilot had known I was down there, with shells loaded in the barrels, I doubt that he would have ever flown over us again. There was another pom-pom gun on a hill. This gun was in the middle of a cemetery, where I would watch as soldiers would, while family members watched, dig-up the bones of the deceased, scrub off the bones, and rebury them.

To me it seemed this gun was two miles from home, but I guess it was only 450 yards through the rice patties. My mother always seemed at ease to let me wander the neighborhood.
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When I went away from the house any distance, I took a English Springer Spaniel that a Chinese Air Force Colonel had loaned to my Dad for hunting. After we got “Chipper,” we discovered he wasn’t much of a hunting dog because he was extremely gun shy; however, he was very protective of me. If you walked-up to me or got within six feet without me saying, “It’s OK Chipper,” he would bite and keep biting the other person, as my girlfriend and our cook/houseboy could attest.

After a year, we moved to Tien-mu.
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Taipei was a wonderful. I learned how to barter at the “Black Market,” how candy, biscuits, pharmaceuticals and records were made from the factories near our first home.
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I made friends with other children such as the daughter of the head of the pharmaceutical factory (and got exposed to chewable vitamins before anyone else I knew) and male friends who lived nearby...some in concrete houses, others in “houses” with tin and straw roofs.





The McAdams home outside of Taipei Air Station in the Wen Shan District, circa 1958.


The McAdams home in Tien-mu circa 1959/1960

Another aspect of our stay was the fighting on Quemoy and Matsu. The tensions were high, and I remember seeing my dad having a Colt 45. About one-half of the servicemen with families sent their families back home.
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We toughed it out. If you look at the picture of the house at Tien-mu, you will notice that I have a rifle resting on my shoulder.... I guess I was our last level of defense for our house (G).
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Sorry to go on-and-on, but some of your readers may enjoy the remembrances of a young boy in Taipei from 1958-1960.
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George McAdams
Sheffield, AL

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Information on Lost Grandmother

A young woman contacted me asking for information on AFNT, explaining that she was trying to find information on her Grandmother.

These photographs were taken at the 15th Anniversary Celebration of the Armed Forces Network Taiwan (AFNT) in 1969. The Grandmother is the young lady standing on the left side of this photo with the longer hair.

She worked at AFNT as a secretary and translator. She also hosted and modeled in a television show that came on every Wednesday called "Fashion Show" on TTV around 1965-1966.

If you recognize this woman or have any information or know of anyone who was at AFNT during this period, please forward the blog URL to them. You can contact me at TaipeiAirStation@hawaii.rr.com.

















Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Times of Youth in Tsoying Naval Base and Places South

Gene Page arrived in Taiwan in 1978, accompanying his step-father who was working for Honeywell with the ROC Navy.

His thoughts of those times are reflected in his short letter found HERE

Gene's web site is HERE

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Excuse Me, Got a Light?


I found this old lighter in my box of "stuff" a few weeks ago. It was a gift passed out to the club members probably at Christmas in 1966 or 1967. The condition of this lighter, it's chipped paint was probably caused by it being dropped into my trousers pocket after lighting up one of the hundreds of cigarettes I smoked using this lighter for fire. I always carried a lighter in my pocket to provide a light for patrons. One of the duties of all Club Management folks.
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I quite smoking in the mid 1970's.
I've posted some new information and photographs about the O Club Annex on the Taipei Air Station web site here: http://mirach.lunarpages.com/~taipe2/index_files/Page390.htm


Does anyone have photographs of the Officer's Club facility on Chungshan North Road or of the Officer's Club Annex? Any photographs would be greatly appreciated.


Changing of the Guard


Jim Caumo visited the Ministry of National Defense in late 1964 and took this photograph as the guard mount was approaching the post for the changing of the guard in the early morning. The sun is showing full on the MND Building, which faces east. Has to be early morning hours.
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The pedicab was still a major means of transportation at this time. Not a lot of traffic on the street this morning.