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The commander of the New York Army National Guard’s 42nd Infantry Division, Maj. Gen. Jack James, joined with surviving U.S.
It began with one used golf club, sent to a British military pilot detained in a German POW camp during World War II.
The handle’s pommel end is a great, less-than-lethal striking tool. Böker’s historically accurate Sleeve Dagger is now ...
Central Berlin was in ruins after the Red Army completed the Allied victory over Nazi Germany in an intense fight for the capital in May ...
AP reporters and photographers chronicled the Nazis' historic defeat 80 years ago this week. Allied forces brought World War ...
What did you miss? Antiques Roadshow's Mark Smith encountered a Nazi general's snobbish pistol during this weekend's VE Day ...
So, the Special Operations Executive, formed in June 1940, tasked agents with sabotage and subversion behind enemy lines. And ...
Two globetrotting German teenagers had their travel plans upended when they were denied entry to the U.S. and detained by border officers who called their trip “suspicious,” according to a report.
In Oldenburg, Germany, a 21-year-old man was fatally shot by police after threatening people with a knife and using irritant gas outside a nightclub. The man had been denied entry to the club and ...
Jack Dougherty, a World War II veteran who lived in Lakewood ... It was still being defended by German troops and SS officers — but not for long. “We didn’t take any prisoners that day ...
Captain Joe Patterson, an SAS medic, was approached by a concerned German citizen ... As revealed in my book SAS Daggers Drawn, one of their own men, SAS Trooper Jenkinson, was being held captive ...
After a few hours, the train came to a halt. The voices of German officers screaming at each other could be heard from outside. The prisoners asked for someone who understood German. Michael’s ...