
Fort and Fortitude: Pushing the Confederate Army to the Breaking Point
Known in official reports as Redoubt H, it was a key part of the Union’s plan to push the Confederate army to the breaking point.
Known in official reports as Redoubt H, it was a key part of the Union’s plan to push the Confederate army to the breaking point.
During World War II American servicemen could take a break at a Stage Door Canteen.
A look at seven of the most infamous mutinies throughout seafaring history
Every half century or so comes a book in a particular field or area of history that is monumental, that immediately becomes the authority on that subject.
Coulson’s collected poems, edited by his father, were published posthumously in 1917 and sold 10,000 copies in the first year. He wrote the poem that follows on August 8, 1916, while in the trenches at the Somme.
In ancient Rome, commanders who broke the unwritten rules of military conduct might be greeted with either praise or punishment.
Harry Rée guided French resistance groups in a series of dramatic sabotage operations. Then he was ordered to kill a Gestapo informer.
Adolf Hitler had an ulterior motive for ramping up the Third Reich’s investment in the German automotive industry and its racing teams.
“Fixin’-to-Die-Rag” derailed his promising musical career. But it led Joe McDonald to become a fierce champion for Vietnam veterans.
Military historian Mark Grimsley makes the startling assertion that the American civil rights movement was an insurgency.
On Hitler’s 50th, adoring Germans hailed their leader for making their country a great power again and for stopping short of the all-out war they so feared—or so they thought.
In 1777 a British general known as “Gentleman Johnny” sold the king on an audacious plan to end the American Revolution.