World War 2 | War History

Making History – The Ship’s Cook Who Grabbed A .50 Cal To Shoot Down Enemy Planes At Pearl Harbor

Elly Farelly

In 1942, when Dorie Miller stood onboard the USS Enterprise at Pearl Harbor to receive the Navy Cross he made history. Miller was the first…

How Britain And America Learned To Work Together On Intelligence In WWII

When America entered WWII, one of the first orders of business was to find ways to work with the British. With their shared language and…

A Tale of Two Rebels: Allied Support for Desperate Partisan Resistance in World War Two

WWII was not just fought between regular armies. Wherever the Germans invaded, resistance movements sprang up to defy them. Backing those groups was an important…

Operation Goodwood: Epic Armor Clash in Normandy – Day One

At 0525 on July 18th 1944, an artillery barrage erupted on the German positions a few kilometers to the east and southeast of Caen. Ten…

When diaries speak –  WWII veteran used diaries to chronicle Army service in Alaska and Europe

War History online proudly presents this Guest Piece from Jeremy P. Ämick, who is a military historian and writes on behalf of the Silver Star Families…

A Costly Failure: Germany’s Failed Attempts to Infiltrate Allied-Occupied Italy

The Allied invasion of Italy was one of the great reversals of WWII. It was followed by the failure of Nazi Germany’s attempts to put…

The Czechoslovakian Crisis: Conquering a Country Without the Use of an Army

War History online proudly presents this Guest Piece from Joseph M. Durante In 1938 the German speaking areas of Czechoslovakia, also known as the Sudetenland,…

Life in Hitler’s Wartime Headquarters

During WWII, Adolf Hitler governed Germany from a series of specially prepared bases. Often located far from cities and the front lines, those places took…

Bringing Home The 8 Million After WWII; Operation Magic Carpet

Elly Farelly

Victory in Europe – what happens next? After victory had been declared in Europe and the Second World War had come to an end with…

Nine Reasons Why Hitler Believed That D-Day Was a Feint

One of the most extraordinary things about the D-Day landings of 1944 was Hitler’s response. The German Fuhrer was utterly convinced the attack was a…

When Allies Fight: Operation Torch and the Taking of North Africa

North Africa was one of the great battlegrounds of the Second World War. From early on, British and Commonwealth forces faced German and Italian troops…

“Twenty-Two on Peleliu” – Four Pacific Campaigns with the Corps: The Memoirs of an Old Breed Marine

War History Online proudly presents this Guest Article from George Peto. This is what it was like to approach the bloody beaches of Peleliu. The following…