Fort Bragg, North Carolina, is returned to its former name without the Confederate namesake, as the Pentagon honored WWII Pvt. Roland Bragg of Maine.
A review of Book and Dagger, How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II, by Elyse Graham.
In this week's Texas history column, Ken Bridges explores Texan Claire Chennault's Flying Tigers volunteer fighter pilots in ...
More than 1,000 Black soldiers trained to become officers at Fort Des Moines during WWI. This year, the Iowa Historical Society will honor their service with a commemorative marker.
Many of Pitts’ soldiers believed they would not have made it through the ordeal had it not been for the leadership of their ...
Women's History Month is about recogniizing the past and present trailblazkers including Charirty Adams Earley, the commandig ...
He added that “the worst thing to do is to halt training … we cannot allow this tragic accident to erode our readiness.” That outlook permeates the Combined Forces Command, in which Korean and ...
The new vice console at Japan's consulate general in Honolulu is none other than an Imperial Japanese naval intelligence officer. One who is a specialist in US Naval warships. He's been monitoring ...
What is it about our own American history and the history of others that delivered us to this point in the life of our ...
The Flying Tigers were one of the first American air units to fight the Japanese as World War II began ... in Baton Rouge through the Reserve Officer Training Corps program.