- suicide. His 3-year-old son had also died in 1885.
Convicted of treason, Soh
Jaipil lost half of his
family and had to flee
Korea to save his life. His only...
-
Philip Jaisohn is a
bronze statue of Soh
Jaipil, in Washington, D.C.
Jaipil, also
known as his
anglicized name
Philip Jaisohn, was a long-time
leader and...
- and was
founded and led by the
prominent Korean independence activist Soh
Jaipil. The
group advocated for
numerous reforms for both
government and society...
- Barnard,
founder of the
Physicians Committee for
Responsible Medicine Soh
Jaipil,
leader of the
Korean independence movement James I. Ausman, editor-in-chief...
-
included Kim Ok-gyun, Park Yung-hyo, Hong Yeong-sik, Seo Gwang-beom, and Soh
Jaipil. The
group was also
relatively young; Pak Yung-hio came from a prestigious...
- into
another use, yet
Yeongeunmun had to be demolished. Meanwhile, Soh
Jaipil, a Korean-American
political activist supporting independence of Joseon...
- Carver,
American botanist, educator, and
inventor (b. 1864) 1951 – Soh
Jaipil,
South Korean-American
journalist and
activist (b. 1864) 1951 –
Andrei Platonov...
- Santos-Dumont
Olive Risley Seward Alexander Robey Shepherd Taras Shevchenko Soh
Jaipil Robert A. Taft
Eleftherios Venizelos George Washington GWU
busts GWU statue...
-
incident is what
sparked the
First Sino–****anese War. In
April 1896, Soh
Jaipil and
others established the
Independence Club: the
first political organization...
- Santos-Dumont
Olive Risley Seward Alexander Robey Shepherd Taras Shevchenko Soh
Jaipil Robert A. Taft
Eleftherios Venizelos George Washington GWU
busts GWU statue...