This was the America’s first operational tactical nuclear missile.
From The Crossroads: Fault Lines
If you’re at Gettysburg National Military Park and decide to trace the battle’s first-day action, you’ll more than likely come across a memorial to the 147th New York Infantry on Reynolds Avenue, just north of the Railroad Cut Bridge. It is, admittedly, a fairly standard monument: a bronze sculpture of a knapsack, canteen, and cartridge box perched below the regiment’s organizational legend. The inscription on the east side of the monument reads, “Position 10 A.M. July 1, 1863,” then lists the regiment’s strength and casualties. The strength and casualty figures are accurate, the position is not. The 147th as a regimental organization never formed where its monument stands.
Laws of War | The Murky Line
What happens when civilian law and military law collide? An 1887 case helped to settle the question
Valor | Leo Thorsness
Medal of Honor recipient, then prisoner of war. In spring 1967, Maj. Leo Keith […]
Lincoln’s Forgotten Defender: A Tough Regular Army Officer Backed the President’s Controversial Suspension of Habeas Corpus
Career U.S. Army soldier William Walton Morris is the epitome of the statement that “Old soldiers never die, they just fade away.”
Daily Quiz for December 5, 2017
She was the first woman to break the sound barrier.
Daily Quiz for December 4, 2017
This was the first state to enact a compulsory education law.
Daily Quiz for December 3, 2017
This man was the first jet-versus-jet fighter ace.
Daily Quiz for December 2, 2017
On May 14, 1866 Congress authorized this coin.
CWT Book Review: “God Alone Knows Which Was Right”
“God Alone Knows Which Was Right”: The Blue and Gray Terrill Family of Virginia […]
