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Van Schaik’s letter inquiring about Army Capt. Walter “Hutch” Huchthausen sent US businessman and author Robert Edsel on an ...
As the faint glimmer of dawn bounced off the waters of Gallipoli on April 25, 1915, Private Dick Clarke huddled in ...
Multiple D.C. officials attended a rededication ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery to unveil new headstones for Jewish World War I veterans who were buried beneath Latin Crosses.
Members of the Rejected Volunteers Association provided vital support to returned soldiers in World War I. Charters Towers historian Michael Brumby has been researching their contributions.
WW2 on TV on MSN2d
World War II - The Dirtiest Soldier To Ever FightAs the United States was violently thrust into World War 2 by the treacherous attack on Pearl Harbor, a deep-seated dread coursed through the veins of American servicemen at the thought of facing a ...
Then 21-year-old US Army Private Willard Merrill was captured by Japanese forces in 1942 while fighting in the Philippines ...
Fort Benning officials held a ceremony to mark the change of the major Army training post from Fort Moore to Fort Benning – a ...
The Fallen Servicemembers Religious Heritage Restoration Act would establish program to correct grave markers.
From a faded sepia-toned photo, five young brothers stare out. They are dressed in soldiers’ uniforms but look more like boys ...
Two Jewish World War I veterans paid the ultimate price for their country and were buried in the hallowed grounds of Arlington National Cemetery – beneath Latin crosses. Just before Passover ...
April 25 is the date in 1915 when the newly formed Australia and New Zealand Army Corps landed on the beaches of Gallipoli, ...
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