War Articles | War History

Civil War Spies: The Confederacy’s Vast Web of Intelligence and Disruption

Reliable Confederate spy records are hard to find. When Union troops were on their way to the South’s capital in Richmond, the Confederate Secretary of…

“It Gave Us Strength” – U.S. Army Veteran Describes Service As Platoon Leader During Vietnam War

War History online proudly presents this Guest Piece from Jeremy P. Ämick, who is a military historian and writes on behalf of the Silver Star…

80 Years, A Tribute To The PBY Catalina – Review by Mark Barnes

Hans Wiesman first came to my attention a few years ago on the publication of his book The Dakota Hunter, a book detailing much of…

Heavy memories – Veteran served aboard battleship USS Washington during several WWII campaigns

War History online proudly presents this Guest Piece from Jeremy P. Ämick, who is a military historian and writes on behalf of the Silver Star Families…

The Shield of Rome: Fabius Cunctator

Many generals are overshadowed or underappreciated for what they did for their state; Belisarius who reconquered much of the lost Western Roman Empire and Tamerlane,…

All Is Fair in Love and War – A WWII Veteran Recalls Making Both

War History Online presents this guest blog by Dave Paone   In 1945, at age 19, Stanley Feltman was a tail gunner in a B-29 for…

Remains of Australians Murdered by The Japanese in WWII, Can’t Be Returned Home

Ian Harvey

The remains of five Australians who were murdered by the Japanese in World War II appear to have been discovered on the island of Nauru.…

WW2 vet who appeared with Obama admits lying about WW2 service

Ian Harvey

Morley Piper, 93, once stood with President Barrack Obama during the 70th-anniversary ceremony for the D-Day invasion of Normandy. The World War II veteran now…

Was Eva Braun a Naive Bystander or Proactive Participant in Nazi Actions

In her 2011 book, Eva Braun: Life with Hitler, author Heike G. Gortemaker paints a portrait of an Eva that was more than the often…

Even in The USA, There Are Still Many Things Folks Don’t Know Too Much About The American Civil War

The American Civil War was fought from April 12, 1861, to May 9, 1865, between the Confederate States (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina,…

The Axis Occupation Of Europe Then And Now – Review by Mark Barnes

We live in troubled times where fear and loathing of immigrants, school yard shootings, youth violence, distant wars and poisonings in sleepy cathedral cities vie…

Thousands of Romans killed in the dense German woodland: What if the Teutoburg Disaster Didn’t Happend

“What if” history questions can be a divisive. Some view them as an exercise in futility, a place where no serious historians should go. Others…