Hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians died in the first months of World War I, which changed the way war was waged. The war was supposed to be over by Christmas of 1914, but by December the ...
From community tree dedications and summer camp plaques to towering monuments and grand museums, World War I remembrances sprawl across the United States, seeking to remind Americans of a defining yet ...
After eight years in the making, acclaimed master sculptor Sabin Howard’s “A Soldier’s Journey”, will be unveiled with the First Illumination ceremony on Friday at 7:15 p.m. ET. It is the final piece ...
In the fall of 2000, Chad Williams was hunting through records at the W. E. B. Du Bois Library at the University of Massachusetts when he made a stunning discovery. Williams, a PhD candidate at ...
WASHINGTON -- The Army Center of Military History (CMH) officially launches their World War I Centennial website on January 17. CMH is the Army's lead agency for all World War I Centennial ...
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A traveling World War I museum set up its exhibit to connect historical moments “Behind the Big Red Doors” at the Stephens County Historical Museum. The exhibit will remain open through Saturday.
Even today, people are killed in northern France by unexploded shells left over from the 700 million artillery and mortar rounds fired on the Western Front during World War I. The fighting between ...