The area first received its reputation around the time of the 1950–1953 Korean War, when it emerged as a kijichon (military base camp town). The practice persisted in the area, despite increasing persecution by the government. As of the early 2020s, the city government has been making vigorous efforts to finally close the district.
History
Yongjugol began as a village that came into being during the Korean War to service members of the United States Army stationed at a nearby military camp whose spending was the sole source of revenue for the village.[2] The military camp, Camp Ross, was just south of Yongjugol and separated the village from Seoul.[3][self-published source] Once the post-war repatriation of prisoners concluded and until 1955, the 24th Military Police Company[4] (seemingly the divisional MP company of the 24th Infantry Division) worked with other United Nations Command military police in Yongjugol to keep law and order in the area. In 1966, a museum dedicated to the 2nd Infantry Division was opened near Yongjugol, having been relocated there from Fort Benning, Georgia, United States. However, the museum was moved to Camp Casey five years later.[5] In 1980, American soldier Freddie Grant attacked another American soldier with a straight razor outside a Yongjugol nightclub and was subsequently imprisoned in the United States Disciplinary Barracks.[6]
In 2022, the city allocated a budget for assisting former sex workers, with eligibility of up to two years of benefits. This was part of an overall effort to put an end to sex work in the area, especially as it was the last red-light district in the city. In September 2023, it was reported that the city was deep in the process of ending the district, with dozens of buildings manually inspected, orders to demolish buildings issued, and legal cases filed. By this point, it was reported that there were still around 50 brothels and 200 workers in the area.[9]
^Margaret E. Scraonton (2000). Orlando J. Pérez (ed.). "Electoral Reform and the Institutionalization of the Electoral Tribunal in Post-Invasion Panama". Post-Invasion Panama: The Challenges of Democratization in the New World Order. Rowman & Littlefield: 103. ISBN073910120X.
^Julio A. Martinez (2011). A Young Soldier's Memoirs: My One Year Growing Up in 1965 Korea. Xlibris. p. 239. ISBN978-1453523872.
^Dylan Goldby; Daniel Sanchez; Matthew Lamers (March 20, 2012). "Girls Are Not For Sale". Groove Korea. Archived from the original on January 6, 2015. Retrieved April 13, 2013.