Curator’s Choice: Swagger Stick Trench Art
The story of a swagger stick presented to T/3 John Sweitzer by his German prisoners.
The story of a swagger stick presented to T/3 John Sweitzer by his German prisoners.
US Marine Corps Women’s Reserve Sgt. and Museum family member Bernice Williams turns 100 years old on March 1, 2021. She says that her 1943-1945 service as a Marine made her a “better person.”
For civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, World War II was a crucial time when he explored nonviolent direct action as a philosophy and a method for challenging racial inequality.
In December 1944, Harriet Pickens and Frances Wills became the first African American WAVES officers.
Medgar Evers was one of more than a million African Americans who served in the US military during World War II. He returned home only to face daily discrimination and paid the ultimate price for his fight against inequality.
The National WWII Museum's own Victory Swing Orchestra celebrates the great big bands of the WWII era.
Shared experiences led to the formation of exclusive yet unofficial clubs that often had strange and oddly specific criteria for membership.
Join us as six talented finalists compete for the title of Stage Door Idol 2024.
Central Time (CT)