A mess cook's sick call visit at Camp Funston became the first recorded military case of an outbreak that killed more U.S. soldiers than the Germans did in WWI.
During Black History Month, revisit the overlooked story of Black US soldiers in WWI—their service overseas and the unequal ...
SISSONNE, France -- A group of Soldiers from the 2nd Infantry Division ROK-U.S. Combined Division traveled from the Republic of Korea to France for the U.S. Army Center of Military History's WWI ...
A wounded pigeon named Cher Ami helped save a battalion of American soldiers, becoming one of the most recognized animals in ...
WASHINGTON -- Descendants of Soldiers and other veterans of World War I will soon be able to visit a national memorial in the nation's capital that commemorates the sacrifices of their ...
NEW YORK — A World War I-era U.S. Army "I WANT YOU" recruitment poster has sold for $20,000 at an auction of some 2,000 wartime posters. The poster sold Tuesday at Guersney's in Manhattan is one of ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X George Malott never talked about his service during World War I. His grandson, Paul Kosiba, ...
Major General Gamal Shehata, head of the Military Research Department, said that the Egyptian army lost more than half a million martyrs in the First World War, some of whom were buried in ...