Showing posts with the label War

The German-Japanese Village Where The Most Fearful Weapon Was Tested

Nov 2, 2020

One of the most devastating weapons ever invented was not the atomic bomb but napalm, the incendiary agent that was used extensively against...

Fokker’s Synchronizing Gear And The Birth of Fighter Planes

Oct 16, 2020

The first airplanes to join the First World War were not made for combat. They merely played the role of an observer, scouting enemy positio...

The Failed British Plan to Destroy Nazi Factories With Exploding Rats

Sep 29, 2020

During the Second World War, the British Special Operations Executive (SOE)—a secret organization whose job was to conduct espionage and sab...

The B-17 That Flew With Its Tail Sliced Off

Aug 26, 2020

This famous photograph of a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, with its tail section severed but still flying was taken during Word War 2, towar...

Schuttberg: Germany’s Rubble Mountains

Aug 7, 2020

Scores of hills dot the edges of many German cities, but these are not natural. They are known as Schuttberg, or “debris hill”. Schuttberg...

Monte Stella: Milan’s Rubble Mountain

Jun 12, 2020

The city of Milan is as flat as a pancake, save for a little bump in the northwest called Monte Stella. In the vast expanse of Po valley, ...

The War Rubble of Crosby Beach

Jun 2, 2020

Photo: pshab/Flickr Just beyond the coastguard station at the end of the promenade at Crosby Beach, in Liverpool, is a flat stretch of s...

Rettungsbojen: The Floating Rescue Buoys of The Luftwaffe

Apr 13, 2020

During World War 2, both the RAF and the Luftwaffe lost a large number of pilots at sea. The British used a couple of high speed boats that ...

The Historic Meeting on Elbe River

Apr 10, 2020

April 25, 1945, is a date few remember. But it was a significant day in the history of the world. On this day, American troops sweeping in...

The Mulberry Harbours of Normandy

Mar 22, 2020

When the sea goes out in Arromanches-les-Bains, a small village on the coast of Normandy in northwestern France, the large concrete pontoons...

The Kettle War

Mar 17, 2020

Photo: B toy Anucha/Shutterstock.com The Kettle War of 1784 was a quintessential David versus Goliath story. A formidable naval fleet of...

Scuttling at Scapa Flow: When The German Navy Sank its Own Ships

Jan 27, 2020

The Armistice of 11 November 1918, that ended hostiles between the Allied and the Allies, left little for negotiation. The Germans were give...

The Last German Surrender

Jan 24, 2020

The weather station where 11 German soldiers were trapped, forgotten by the fallen Nazis. Weather played an important role during the Se...

Bomb Crater Garden

Nov 25, 2019

On September 20, 1940, just over a year after Hitler’s army invaded Poland triggering a six-year war, a German airplane dropped a bomb over...

The Submarine Sunk By Her Own Torpedo

Oct 28, 2019

The U.S. Navy submarine USS Tang off the Mare Island Navy Yard, California, December 1943. Photo credit: U.S. Navy Throughout the Second W...

Britain's Last Remaining World War One Memorial Tank

Sep 2, 2019

After the end of the First World War, many British towns received gifts from the National War Savings Committee as recognition for the commu...

Helepolis: The Failed War Machine From Which Rose a Wonder of The Ancient World

Jul 26, 2019

At the entrance to the harbor of the city of Rhodes, on the Greek island of the same name, there once stood a colossal statue made of iron, ...

That Time When America Air-Dropped Pianos For Troops in Battlefields

Jul 2, 2019

You thought pianos dropping from the sky is a gag for cartoons? Then hear this story out. During World War Two, all kinds of production inv...

Hellburner: The 16th Century Weapon of Mass Destruction

Jun 29, 2019

In the age of sail, when ships were made of wood, fire was the number one enemy of sailors, and this fearsome tool was used in diabolic ways...

The Warship That Couldn’t Stay Afloat

May 30, 2019

During the American Civil War, the Union Navy designed a class of warships called “Casco” that could submerge its hull at will to make the b...