Welcome to WebOps, Armchair General’s first website column! Each week WebOps links you to the best military history news and websites making the headlines throughout the Internet. Just how does Heddy Lamar tie into military history? What event in military history celebrated its 225th anniversary? What two British Army elements are still making history today? These answers, and much more, can be found in this week’s links. Clicks away!
Sunday
Patricia Poist is both a reporter and military history buff who recently took a flight in the B-25 Bomber “Tondelayo”. I think she does a great job in bringing many aspects of military history surrounding the B-25 into her story.
Rabbi Francis Nataf ponders what he calls a World War II ‘error’, wondering why the Allies didn’t extend the Maginot Line in France "on its border with Germany to also include France’s border with Belgium."
This article, Quicktime video report and photo gallery document the 102nd Military History Detachment (Kansas Army National Guard) during their work in the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Katrina a year ago.
Military historians and the public of New Mexico are $100,000 closer to completing the New Mexico Museum of Military History, to be located in Rio Rancho.
Medal of Honor recepient Sergeant First Class Paul R. Smith had another grand honor bestowed upon him with the recent dedication of the new Paul R. Smith Middle School in Holiday, Florida.
Residents in and around Prince Edward Island, Canada, will be treated to seeing the Canadian Forces Snowbirds at this years’ four-day Airshow on the Bay and Salute to the Military, scheduled for September 14-17.
Much of military history involves research and analysis of the accounts of past wars. However, in the current Internet Age, where information is often received in near real-time, we have the luxury of being able to analyze warfare very soon after an action has taken place. This is one such analysis on the "Battle of Baghdad".
Vermont will soon be dedicating a granite statue in remembrance of the soldiers who fought and died during the Civil War Battle at Wilderness which took place on May 5-6, 1864.
A new museum exhibit in Germany, titled "Forced Paths", has increased already tensed relations between Germany and Poland regarding how each country views World War II and the years of intense struggle afterwards.
While not completely about military history, this look at seven U.S. islands steeped in history show just how easy is it to bump up against military history with just a simple glance at overall history.
The British Army recently added another page to its’ already grand book of military history when a regiment ended "the longest deployment of any regiment in the British Army in its history."
During my training to become a military historian while serving in the North Carolina National Guard, the 182nd Infantry Regiment (Massachusetts) was the first unit heard of and taught about. It warms my heart to see their patch being returned to them. At last look, the photos here are not working (for me at least), though their cutlines are. The story is where it’s at, though.
Scott Walker is a pastor and a military historian living in Waco, Texas. His research on the Confederacy’s 57th Georgia Regiment has come to fruition in his book "Hell’s Broke Loose in Georgia" (The University of Georgia Press, $39.95). This article gives a short bio about Walker and his work on the book.
A Bailey bridge, "that marvel of British engineering that is the envy of the civilized world", finds new life in the 21st century, thanks to the U.S. Forest Service.
Dr. Charles Pewitt of Jackson, Missouri, is set to become the first private U.S. citizen to create his own large-scale military exhibit, soon to include an M551 Sheridan!
Anyone who happens to be anywhere near Galesburg, Illinois this week may want to attend the 35th annual National Stearman Fly-In at the Galesburg Municipal Airport. I sure wish I could attend!
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