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Tag: On Point 30.3 2025

A Debt of Gratitude: How Jimmy Carter Put Vietnam Veterans’ Issues on the National Agenda

“Robins’s book presents . . . challenging realities in a succinct and articulate manner, displaying the differences between good intention versus real world results.”

Mobilizing the South: The Thirty-First Infantry Division, Race, and World War II Review

“If only more historical studies were so critical of the protagonists, to show their complexities and biases, how they can be both heroic and unjust.”

“Tell Mother Not to Worry”: Soldier Stories from Gettysburg’s George Spangler Farm Review

“What makes this work especially impressive are the anecdotes of so many, not only during the battle, but for years after the Battle of Gettysburg, from what happened at the Spangler Farm hospitals.”

Peace, War, and Partnership: Congress and the Military since World War II Review

“These writings provide a clear and accessible narrative of the ebb and flow of Congressional involvement with the national defense establishment and the corresponding relations with the executive branch.”

Memory Wars: Settlers and Natives Remember Washington’s Sullivan Expedition of 1779 Review

“Memory Wars is especially relevant to public historians, museum professionals, and others who study, create, and dismantle inaccurate narratives consumed by the public at interpretive sites.”

Guest of Adolf: The War of SSG Ernest V. Focht, 805th Tank Destroyer Battalion Review

“Michael H. Zang weaves a welcome story of a soldier’s long internment and daily activities in World War II German prisoner of war (POW) camps.”

The Forgotten Battles of the Chancellorsville Campaign: Fredericksburg, Salem Church and Banks’ Ford in Spring 1863 Review

“Supported by well-done maps, Nelson’s study is a worthwhile addition to an overlooked chapter of the Chancellorsville Campaign.”

A Horror No Word Describes: U.S. Army Soldiers Liberating Holocaust Survivors in World War II 

A sign erected outside of Dachau concentration camp’s crematorium is shown here in a 1948 photograph. Today, the crematorium area is the primary location for remembrance of the Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site. (National Archives)

U.S. Army Soldiers were wholly unprepared for what they witnessed when they liberated Holocaust concentration camps; yet they returned humanity to those who had been declared and treated as inhuman.

Flawed Commanders and Strategy: In the Battles for Italy, 1943-45 Review

“Flawed Commanders and Strategy provides an insightful perspective into the human elements of military leadership during the Italian Campaign.”

Clearing the Way: U.S. Army Engineers in World War II Review

“The exploits of U.S. Army engineers during World War II are certainly worthy of serious examination and praise.”

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The Army Historical Foundation

The Army Historical Foundation is the designated official fundraising organization for the National Museum of the United States Army.
We were established in 1983 as a member-based, charitable 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. We seek to educate future Americans to fully appreciate the sacrifices that generations of American Soldiers have made to safeguard the freedoms of this Nation. Our funding helps to acquire and conserve Army historical art and artifacts, support Army history educational programs, research, and publication of historical materials on the American Soldier, and provide support and counsel to private and governmental organizations committed to the same goals. This is a non-federal entity. It is not part of the department of defense or any of its components, and it has no government status. 

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