Related Content
-
Article Type
Organizing Genocide: Theodor Dannecker, Eichmann's Deportation Specialist
Learn MoreTheodor Dannecker helped Adolf Eichmann administer a continent-wide genocide.
-
Article Type
Mail Call: Wendell Wiley Wolfenbarger, January 1, 1945
Learn MoreIn 1944 and 1945, postal worker turned soldier, Wendell Wiley Wolfenbarger, wrote his wife Ruby and children frequent letters. Sometimes they were postcards, sometimes V-mails, and others were written "sitting on a box by a wood fire, outside of course, writing on my knee."
-
“Citizen 865: The Hunt for Hitler’s Hidden Soldiers in America”
Learn MoreMeet the Author: Debbie Cenziper's book tells the gripping story of a team of Nazi hunters at the US Department of Justice as they raced against time to expose members of a brutal SS killing force who disappeared in America after World War II.
-
Article Type
Bing Crosby's 1944 Christmas Message
Learn More“On our fighting front, there are no silent nights, but there are plenty of holy nights."
-
Article Type
“Gee, I Wish I Was Back in the Army”
Learn MoreThe classic holiday musical White Christmas reveals the impact of military service in World War II.
-
Article Type
The Battle of the Bulge Gallery at The National WWII Museum
Learn MoreFollow the largest battle in the history of the US Army as experienced on the Road to Berlin permanent exhibit gallery.
-
Article Type
The Fall of the Golden Lions
Learn MoreFor the 106th Infantry Division, the Opening of the Bulge was a Death Blow.
-
Article Type
The Battles for Elsenborn Ridge Part II
Learn MoreAt the end of the day, the veterans of the 26th Infantry still held their ground and looked out on a battlefield strewn with destroyed German armor and scores of enemy dead.
-
Article Type
The Battle of the Bulge
Learn MoreThe Battle of the Bulge was the US Army's greatest struggle to deny Adolf Hitler's last chance for victory.
-
Article Type
The Battles for Elsenborn Ridge Part I
Learn MoreThe real crusher to the German offensive plans in the Ardennes occurred 46 miles north east of Bastogne, in a small area consisting of a copse of small villages and a piece of high ground called Elsenborn Ridge.
-
Article Type
Major Glenn Miller: The Loss of an Icon
Learn More“We didn’t come here to set any fashions in music. We merely came to bring a much-needed touch of home to some lads who have been here a couple of years.” – Glenn Miller
-
Article Type
“An Excellent Turkey Dinner”: Christmas Overseas in World War II
Learn MoreA hot meal and packages from home provided solace for millions of servicemen abroad during WWII.