Accordingly, even though Roosevelt was well aware of the impending Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, he let it happen, and was relieved and pleased when it did take place. The evidence to support ...
For biographers of Internationalist Franklin Roosevelt, the great salesman of ... were introduced last week into the records of the Pearl Harbor investigation. They were of little value to ...
Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum Supervisory Curator Herman Eberhardt provided an introduction to the December 7th, 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. This lesson explores ...
The attack on Pearl Harbor launched the United States into World War II and left an indelible scar on the American psyche matched only by the attacks of Sept. 11. A recorded 2,403 service members and ...
Warren “Red” Upton, a 105-year-old World War II US veteran who was the oldest living survivor of the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor ... President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously described it ...
Here's a cool artifact from the intersection of United States history and Major League Baseball history, courtesy of presidential historian Michael Beschloss on Twitter (where else these days?
Lindbergh said war was unlikely. When he was proved wrong, he argued that deploying U.S. forces to Europe wouldn’t make a difference.
Upton was the last remaining survivor of the USS Utah, a battleship moored at Pearl Harbor when Japanese planes began bombing Hawaii. In a famous speech, then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt ...