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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNRemains of American Soldier Captured by the Japanese During World War II Identified Nearly 80 Years LaterAfter his plane was shot down, Glenn H. Hodak was sent to a military prison in Tokyo, where he was killed by U.S. firebombing ...
Ever wondered how the U.S. brought smaller planes overseas during World War II? It was definitely more tedious work than ...
Enola Gay was the name of the B-29 aircraft that dropped the world's first atomic bomb used in war on Hiroshima, Japan, ...
It's hard to imagine now in our globalized world, but many of the young American soldiers who headed onto massive ships like ...
A World War II airman who was taken captive by Japanese forces and died in a prison fire after his plane was shot down has ...
The 33-foot Corsair, on loan from Florida, had to be “rigged up on skates” to get to the Intrepid’s hangar deck.
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Army Times on MSNThe P-51 Mustang and the man who won the World War II air war with itIt was thanks to former WWI pilot Tommy Hitchcock that the P-51 entered U.S service — and changed the skies over Europe ...
Sgt. James Raley's account came almost three months to the day after he improbably survived that fall from the skies over ...
Greenville native Miles Richard "Dick" League, a colonel in the U.S. Air Force, fought in World War II. He was a prisoner of ...
As time goes on, keeping these warbirds flying becomes more difficult, and restoring them from parts is nearly impossible ...
References to the aircraft—which dropped the first war-time atomic bomb—were flagged for removal from Pentagon photos and online posts as part of a DEI purge, presumably because of the word “gay.” ...
Discover the Intrepid Museum's World War II exhibit, showcasing the Corsair aircraft and artifacts from Loren Isley's final mission and other historic items.
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