Graffiti has been a part of military life for at least 5,000 years
by Seamus Bellamy from on (#3V6C7)
World War II brought U.S. troops to Europe by the millions, and this time they were accompanied by a friend: Kilroy. Kilroy was a mysterious phantom, asserting his presence in the scrawled phrase "Kilroy was here," often accompanied by a cartoon doodle of a bald head just peeking over a wall, nose and fingers visible. And Kilroy was everywhere. Troops claimed that when they'd storm a beach or take a village, they'd somehow find that Kilroy had gotten there before them. One story goes that Stalin came back from the bathroom at the 1945 Potsdam Conference demanding to know who Kilroy was; sure enough, some enterprising G.I. had tagged the bathroom. Just what the appeal of Kilroy was we'll never quite know, which is perhaps the greatest example of a military-wide inside joke.It's a great read, full of humor, sadness and thoughts on the impermanence of life--that's a lot to ask from a feature on graffiti. Image via Wikipedia Commons