Anniversaries & Commemorations
Designated by Congress in 2004 as America’s National WWII Museum, we remember these special dates, commemorating the fallen and honoring the WWII generation who helped preserve the freedom we enjoy today.
Designated by Congress in 2004 as America’s National WWII Museum, we remember these special dates, commemorating the fallen and honoring the WWII generation who helped preserve the freedom we enjoy today.
Historical fiction has a power all its own to communicate experiences of war and atrocity.
More than 40,000 students across the country participated in the Museum's live interactive Electronic Field Trip.
From our 21st-century point of view, it is hard to imagine World War II without the United States as a major participant. Before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, however, Americans were seriously divided over what the role of the United States in the war should be, or if it should even have a role at all. Even as the war consumed large portions of Europe and Asia in the late 1930s and early 1940s, there was no clear consensus on how the United States should respond.
A $1 million gift supports Louisiana Memorial Pavilion's animated WWII map as well as a Virtual Field Trip about Latino experiences in World War II.
Shared experiences led to the formation of exclusive yet unofficial clubs that often had strange and oddly specific criteria for membership.
Join The National WWII Museum's Educational Travel Team and historian Alexandra Richie to learn about this new cruise and tour commemorating the 80th anniversary of V-E Day.
Central Time (CT)
Join us in conversation with Mark Calhoun, PhD, author of General Lesley J. McNair: Unsung Architect of the US Army, an in-depth study of the man who contributed so substantially to America’s war preparedness that George C. Marshall once called him “the brains of the Army.”