With fire streaming from his engine and the right wing half enveloped in flames, Lindsey led the formation to drop their 2,000-pound loads over France.
Only Stowers, however, would receive the receive the nation’s highest military honor — 73 years after the soldier’s death. Born on Jan. 12, 1896, in Sandy Springs, South Carolina, Stowers, the ...
The government pulled together funds to pay troops Oct. 15 and now Nov. 1, but officials said it’s doubtful they'll be paid ...
Neel Kearby became a hardcore “believer” in the P-47 and devoted himself to developing a doctrine for making the most of the ...
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk called for an investigation into the strikes in what appears to mark the ...
The Marine Corps is dialing back its vision for shallow-water littoral regiments, but greenlighting a new unit with special ...
The U.S. Navy has replaced the admiral in charge of the Office of Naval Research with a civilian who has reportedly worked as ...
In March 1915, Raymond Lodge was deployed to France. By September, he was dead. A few weeks later, however, he got in touch ...
Defense Health Agency officials have launched an effort to bring back Medicare-eligible Tricare for Life military patients to ...
The U.S. Marines conducted a landmark training exercise which saw them fire the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS ...
"I could not shake the feeling that today was going to be a scary day," a Vietnam veteran writes in this War Horse reflection ...
Mary Hawkins spent 13 months flying the wounded out of the Pacific Theater, becoming one of the few women to be awarded the ...