On the evening of September 17, 1862, in the aftermath of the Battle of Antietam, Private Franklin Thompson of the Second Michigan Infantry Regiment walked among the wounded, the dying and the dead.
Hezbollah has been trading attacks across the southern Lebanese border with Israel for nearly a year, since October 8 when it ...
The Shelby County Historical Society and the City of Sidney are partnering to host the biannual Civil War Living History ...
The residence was owned by Martin Bruce, the namesake of Bruce Beach, and has been restored and modernized while retaining ...
While the 58-foot-long bronze sculpture in Washington D.C. will now be the country's foremost World War I memorial, it is far ...
A combination of civil rights legislative wins, commitments to diverse representation, and opposition to racism led many ...
The Friends of Fulton History group hosts a talk about Fulton’s Civil War heritage on Sunday, Sept. 22 at 1:30 p.m. The presentation takes place at the John Wells Pratt House Museum, ...
Atlas of the Irish Civil War is a new book in the Cork-based 'Atlas...' series that delves into the awful events in the ...
New perspectives' commits to print for the first time a list of all combatant and civilian fatalities of the war ...
Design by Richmond artist Sandy Williams IV unveiled for a memorial to the enslaved who had ties to Roanoke College before ...
The next regular meeting of the Civil War Round Table of the Mid-Ohio Valley will be 7 p.m. Sept. 19 at the Blennerhassett Museum of Regional History, 137 Juliana St., Parkersburg. The presentation ...
On today’s edition of Sunrise Spotlight, News 40’s Michael Ridgeway sat down with Sam Terry. He told us all about the ...