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The Liberation of Dachau Concentration Camp
Learn MoreNazi Germany’s first concentration camp was liberated by American troops on April 29, 1945.
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Project Seeking to Identify USS Arizona Unknowns Reaches Key DNA Milestone
Learn MoreOn April 23, 2026, the DPAA announced that it had met the 60 percent threshold for the USS Arizona Unknown Identification Project.
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How to Teach WWII: Hitler’s War on Modern Art
Learn MoreThis month, we explore how the Nazi campaign against “degenerate” modernist art and music can help students use Visual Thinking Strategies as a way to observe and think critically about art, as well as teach them how culture plays into times of war.
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Come Back Fighting! The USS New Orleans in World War II
Learn MoreNot only was the vessel a hometown hero, the USS New Orleans also participated in almost every major campaign against Japan. And when faced with great tragedy, she always bounced back, much like the people of New Orleans did after disasters such as Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
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WWII Veteran Norman Bussel, POW and PTSD Advocate, Dies at 102
Learn MoreBussel spent a year as a prisoner of war after his plane was shot down over Germany—a traumatic experience that would fuel his work on behalf of veterans and former POWs later in life.
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American Liberators: Buchenwald
Learn MoreAmerican soldiers liberated the concentration camp at Buchenwald on April 11, 1945, and were profoundly shaken by what they discovered.
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Roy J. Caldwood: Testimony of a WWII Medic with the Buffalo Soldiers
Learn MoreMoments where compassion collided with combat defined Roy J. Caldwood's experience as an African American medic serving with the 92nd Infantry Division during World War II.
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Roderick W. Edmonds Awarded Medal of Honor for WWII POW Camp Resistance
Learn MoreOn January 27, 1945, the courage of Master Sergeant Roderick W. “Roddie” Edmonds to speak up for his fellow POWs shielded them from certain persecution and potential death.
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Rosie the Riveter: Women War Workers on the WWII Home Front
Learn MoreRosie the Riveter represents the more than six million women from a wide variety of backgrounds who entered the workforce to support the American war effort.
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How to Teach WWII: The War’s Impact on American Women
Learn MoreThis month, we invite you to consider how the war that changed the world changed life for women in the United States.
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General George S. Patton
Learn MoreFew American generals of World War II inspired as much admiration or as much controversy as George S. Patton.
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The True Glory (1945): Teamwork Wins Wars
Learn MoreThe True Glory chronicles the Allied liberation of Western Europe, from the preparations for Operation Overlord to the fall of Berlin.