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War on a Shoestring: The Fight for Guadalcanal
Learn MoreThe August 1942 landing on Guadalcanal was a colossal improvisation, concocted on the fly to take advantage of a recent dramatic turn in the Pacific war.
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Sergeant Benton J. Broussard
Learn MoreA native of Crowley, Louisiana, the bilingual Broussard served as a translator for the 507th Infantry Regiment, giving his life shortly after D-Day.
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Sergeant Irving Becker
Learn MoreAn Austrian Jew serving in the US military, Irving Becker endured discrimination from both ally and foe during World War II. He ended up a crucial part of one of the most elite Allied forces ever assembled.
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Shreveport Under Attack: A Look Back at the Louisiana Maneuvers
Learn MoreWhile military maneuvers train and test a force’s capabilities, they can also seem like an “alternate history” at times. Consider these fascinating front pages from September 1941, reprinted here courtesy of The Shreveport Times, describing the US Army’s big Louisiana Maneuvers.
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Dunkirk
Learn MoreSenior Historian Robert M. Citino, PhD, on Christopher Nolan’s WWII epic: “Nolan is particularly good at weaving together war’s three domains: on land, at sea, and in the air. The air battles, often a weak and confusing bore in war films, are as well-presented as any I’ve ever seen, and the German Stuka attacks, especially, are terrifying. No war film is truly realistic, but Dunkirk is as good as it gets.”
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Preparing for the Citizen Soldier’s Return: the GI Bill of 1944
Learn More"By the war’s conclusion, nearly 16 million men and a half million women would provide military service for their country. Where would the opportunities to create better lives for themselves come from for these men and women who had seen, experienced, and sacrificed so much during the war years?"
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Stalag Symphony: Clair Cline
Learn MoreIn European prisoner of war camps, boredom became as fearsome an enemy as the Nazis themselves. These Americans fought it with inspiring creativity.
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Higgins Industries Builder’s Plaque Returns to PT-305
Learn MoreAfter more than 70 years away, a unique identifier is restored.
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How PT-305 Got Her Custom Portholes
Learn MoreLearn how this unique field modification came to be.
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New Orleans in the Second World War
Learn MoreTwo years after the renowned historian began planning a war museum and eight years before The National D-Day Museum opened, Ambrose delivered a lecture, “New Orleans in the Second World War.”
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Operation Husky: The Allied Invasion of Sicily
Learn MoreOn July 10, 1943, the Allies launched Operation Husky before sunrise, a massive amphibious assault on the southern shores of the island.