Eighty years ago, on June 6, 1944, some 156,000 Allied soldiers stormed the beaches of Normandy, France, to defeat the Nazis.
Here’s What You Need To Remember: Ultimately, the most crucial consequence of surrender at Dunkirk would have been not manpower and morale, but timing. Thankfully, this didn’t happen.
West Palm Beach centenarian Franklin Simon, who celebrated his 100th birthday in June, served heroically in Europe during ...
The creator of the project Tansy Forster was born in Magherafelt and now lives in Normandy, France. "It started off as a ...
To commemorate his father’s service in World War Two, Nigel Stoate and his son sailed the Channel – and back – in their 1944 ...
When he was 19 years old, Joseph B. "Ben" Miller landed at Normandy on D-Day in a paraglider. Eighty years later, he visited Normandy with fellow veterans in June 2024 to remember that day. On Tuesday ...
Naval analyst H I Sutton has published a report in Naval News highlighting the appearance of between three and five new ...
The possibility of placing peacekeepers on Ukraine will be discussed at an informal meeting on February 3 by British Prime ...
China is reportedly building a fleet of landing ships that could be used in an invasion of Taiwan. The barges have been ...
Thanks to its proximity to Paris, Normandy makes for an easy daytrip that's especially popular with travelers interested in seeing Monet's house and gardens or the D-Day Beaches. But if you only ...
World War II veteran Dick Schermerhorn, who cleared mines on a Normandy beach during the D-Day assault, died Tuesday. At 102, ...