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Sacrifice: The 333rd Field Artillery at the Battle of the Bulge
Learn MoreManning 155mm howitzers, African American gunners sacrificed themselves to defend fleeing infantry. Eleven of them were murdered by the Waffen SS, and then forgotten by the US Army.
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Forgotten Fights: Operation Dragoon and the Decline of the Anglo-American Alliance
Learn MoreOperation Dragoon was the successful Allied invasion of southern France that also highlighted the intense Allied disagreements over strategy.
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Unstoppable: The African American 784th Tank Battalion
Learn MoreThe 784th Tank Battalion's motto was "It Will Be Done." This African American unit imposed its will on the enemy in combat in 1945.
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Going for Broke: The 100th Infantry Battalion
Learn MoreThe 100th Infantry Battalion, comprised largely of second generation Nisei, bravely fought in Europe and became one of America's most highly decorated units of World War II.
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All the Way: the 614th Tank Destroyer Battalion Cracks Germany's Siegfried Line, 1945
Learn MoreThe African American 614th Tank Destroyer Battalion's aggressive assault across Germany's Siegfried Line in 1945 earned the respect and camaraderie of white GIs in the front lines.
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Curator to Curator Q & A: Kurt Vonnegut
Learn MoreIn advance of a discussion on Slaughterhouse-Five, Assistant Director for Curatorial Services Kimberly Guise posed some questions to Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library Curator Chris Lafave.
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'I've Too Damned Much to Say': Kurt Vonnegut, World War II, and Slaughterhouse-Five
Learn MoreFrom January 1943 to June 1945, writer Kurt Vonnegut served in the US Army. His experiences with the 106th Infantry Division during the Battle of the Bulge and then later as a prisoner of war in Dresden imprinted his life and provided traumatic (and sometimes comedic) material for his novel Slaughterhouse-Five and other works.
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WWII Buffalo Soldier Rothacker Smith, 366th Infantry Regiment
Learn MoreDr. Rothacker Smith looked death in the eye several times during World War II. In these moments during his wartime service, during captivity as a German POW and beyond, his faith carried him through and indeed directed much of his life, as did the proud tradition of the Buffalo Soldier which he upheld.
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A Blessing Effectively Disguised: Churchill and the British General Election of 1945 by Michael F. Bishop
Learn MorePrime Minister Winston Churchill's defeat in the British General Election of 1945 changed the course of the Potsdam Conference.
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Major Charles L. Thomas and the 614th Tank Destroyer Battalion
Learn MoreThe African American 614th Tank Destroyer Battalion earned a Presidential Unit Citation for its heroic stand in France in December 1944, and a Medal of Honor in 1980 posthumously awarded to Major Charles Thomas.
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The Liberation of Majdanek
Learn MoreThe Red Army's liberation of Majdanek in July 1944 was one of the most significant moments in the history of World War II and the Holocaust.
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World War I's Stalingrad: The Siege of Przemyśl and Europe’s Bloodlands by Alexander Watson, PhD
Learn MoreOne of World War I's greatest battles, the siege of Przemyśl, set the stage for the brutal fighting—and genocide—that scarred Eastern Europe in World War II.