German soldiers entered World War II believing British troops were weak and unwilling to fight. Through battles from Dunkirk to Normandy, that belief was tested, challenged, and ultimately overturned.
Guards at the Curragh had blanks in their weapons and the internees, allied and German, were allowed to visit local pubs and ...
Archie Hemsley may be 101, but his mastery on the golf course is a sight to behold. Hemsley, a British World War II veteran, ...
In small town America, boys with absent heads of households were taken under the wing of World War I veterans from such ...
A World War Two veteran who fought in Normandy as a teenager before becoming a prisoner of war has died at the age of 100, a ...
Peter Kindred grew up in a farmhouse stuffed with World War Two arms and explosives. His father's Home Guard uniform was ...
This video tells the story of how the U.S. Army transformed itself after its defeat at Kasserine Pass. It follows Major ...
Operation Cowboy stands as one of only two documented occasions during World War II when U.S. and Wehrmacht forces fought ...
This undated file photo shows an interior view of a prisoner of war (POW) camp barrack restored according to the real scene ...
Tim was born in 1944, one of 5,000 babies born at Shardeloes when it was requisitioned as a maternity hospital during WWII. His father, Major Hugh Gordon Rice served with the Eighth Army and his ...
Eighty years since the end of World War II, the British are recalling many battles fought on the path to victory. Yet one ...