A dead German’s journal described a fierce American airborne enemy capable of striking anywhere and anytime as the “devils in
The “House of Horrors” from William E Fairbairn was something special. Smoke fills the doorway as the recruit, armed with
With the sun suddenly blocked by German airplanes and the streets teaming with trucks and troops, Denmark peacefully submitted to
With shrapnel shredding skin, bullets breaking bones and trenches trapping tanks, the 761st fought furiously for their first days in
While infantry companies were lobbing mortars, laying down suppressive fire and maneuvering with H-harnesses, helmets, rifles and rucks, the T-shirt-wearing,
Newspaper articles from decades ago sporadically documented the major cases of police Lt. Ira Luther Cooper, the first African American
In an era where lawmen used fist, feet and firearms to capture fugitives, Frank Hamer reigned supreme for four decades
Virginia Hall was the first Allied spy to operate in occupied France. She was trained in the art of silencing
Thirty-six years before Joe Strummer of The Clash sported a mohawk with his band of rebels and waged musical war
The formation of the 9th and 10th cavalries happened in August of 1866. Comprised mostly of African-American enlisted men, the