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Article TypeA Costly Failure: Patton’s Raid to Liberate HammelburgLearn MoreAllied intelligence believed that most captured American officers were being held at the Hammelburg prisoner of war camp, Oflag XIII-B. This population likely included Patton’s son-in-law, Lieutenant Colonel John Waters, but there was no way to be sure. 
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Article TypeHuman Rights of Persons with Schizophrenia Before and After WartimeLearn MoreAs World War II approached, schizophrenics became victims of an even greater human rights violation at the hands of the Third Reich. 
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Article TypeRobert Craig’s Medal of HonorLearn MoreFor his heroic service as an infantry officer during the Allied invasion of Sicily, Second Lieutenant Robert Craig was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor on July 11, 1943. 
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Article TypeOperation Greif: German Commandos Sow Chaos Dressed in US UniformsLearn MoreAdolf Hitler's secret mission to Otto Skorzeny during the Ardennes Counteroffensive would rely on deception, employing English-speaking troops in US Army uniforms and equipment. 
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2023 Summer Seminar in Military HistoryLearn MoreFellows were introduced to the wealth of resources available within the Museum’s collection and in the field at-large, gaining advice on how to use these valuable tools in their own teaching and scholarship. 
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Article Type'Danger! Women at Work': Patsy Kelly's 1943 RompLearn MoreWartime film star Patsy Kelly's most defiant act was being an openly gay woman in an inhospitable climate for the LGBTQIA+ community. 
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Article TypeThe Smith–Connally Act and Labor Battles on the Home FrontLearn MoreWar production was crucial for an Allied victory, but what happened when labor strikes challenged the “arsenal of democracy”? 
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Article TypeGeorge Benton Turner’s Medal of HonorLearn MoreGeorge Benton Turner joined the US Marine Corps in 1918, but World War I ended before he shipped overseas. When World War II broke out, Turner, now in his early 40s, once again volunteered to fight for his country, this time enlisting in the US Army in October 1942. 
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Article TypeThe Zoot Suit Riots and Wartime Los AngelesLearn MoreFor five days in 1943, a fashion fad was at the center of racial violence in Los Angeles. 
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Article TypeSacrificing Everything: Isadore S. Jachman’s Medal of HonorLearn MoreJewish Americans like Isadore S. Jachman contributed greatly to the American war effort in World War II, risking—and sacrificing—everything in the struggle against fascism. 
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Article TypeJoseph Stalin and the Dissolution of the CominternLearn MoreOn May 22, 1943, Moscow announced the dissolution of the Communist International. 
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Article TypeBenjamin Salomon’s Medal of HonorLearn MoreBenjamin Salomon, a Jewish American dental officer in the Army, made the ultimate sacrifice in defense of his patients and fellow soldiers in World War II. Almost 60 years after his death in the Pacific, he was awarded the Medal of Honor. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
