At the historic Wendover Airfield, a once bustling hub of World War II military training, a new effort is underway to ensure that thousands of fallen aviators are finally honored.
Eighty years since the end of World War II, a push has begun to build a memorial at Historic Wendover Airfield honoring the men and women who died while training at the facility.
The Secretary of the Army has posthumously promoted seven second-generation Japanese American soldiers, known as Nisei, who ...
The German Army in World War II was one of the most powerful and disciplined military forces ever assembled, but what made it ...
This video recounts the story of Ed McNeff, a pilot of the 355th Fighter Group, highlighting his first dogfight against the ...
Lt. Col. George Hardy, one of the original Tuskegee Airmen died Tuesday night.George Hardy, last of the Tuskegee Airmen's ...
Archaeologists are searching the site where a World War Two American plane crashed in 1944 in the hope of finding its pilot's ...
Taber Woodrum and Amy Wilda, from Oregon, walk Wednesday under the wing of a 1944 World War II-era Mitchell medium bombardier training plane, a B-25 dubbed “Sweet Dreams,” on display in the Rowland ...
A south Georgia museum is getting some additional federal funding to preserve its impact on aviation training for WWII pilots ...
WWII hero Lt. Col. George Hardy, the youngest Tuskegee Airman combat pilot at 19, has died at 100 at his Sarasota home after ...