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World War II

DC
What Was It Like to Ration in DC during World War II?

What Was It Like to Ration in DC during World War II?

07/08/2022 in DC by Meaghan Kacmarcik

What was it like to feed a family in Washington, D.C. during the days of World War II rationing? Put yourself in the shoes of a 30-year-old mother of two and find out.

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Maryland
La Dame qui Boite  (The Limping Woman)

La Dame qui Boite (The Limping Woman)

06/14/2022 in Maryland by Meaghan Kacmarcik

Trekking through the thick winter snow of the Pyrenees mountain range, Virginia Hall struggled with each passing step. After thirteen months in war-torn France with insufficient access to food, heating, and clothes, the once striking thirty-six-year-old lost the glow of youth. Hardened by the death, loss, and destruction, she witnessed at the hands of the Nazis and their collaborators, she was determined to complete the arduous journey through the mountain range that separated occupied France from neutral Spain.

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DC
Secrets in the Forest: A Virginia Summer Camp Becomes a Playground for Spies

Secrets in the Forest: A Virginia Summer Camp Becomes a Playground for Spies

10/04/2021 in DC by Dominique Mickiewicz

Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to begin your training as a World War II spy in the forests of Prince William County, Virginia.

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DC
The Filipino Women’s Club of Washington D.C.

The Filipino Women’s Club of Washington D.C.

03/20/2020 in DC by Karis Lee

When the U.S. entered WWII in late 1941, women all over Washington stepped up to fulfill wartime needs; and Filipino women were certainly no exception. The Filipino Women's Club of Washington, formed in 1943, played a crucial role in the war effort and inspired community when the city most needed it. 

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DC
Lefty Brewer's Ultimate Sacrifice: A Baseball Star Leaves Washington for WWII and Never Returns

Lefty Brewer's Ultimate Sacrifice: A Baseball Star Leaves Washington for WWII and Never Returns

06/06/2019 in DC by Reagan Graney

Scout Joe Cambria of the Washington Senators was in Florida in the summer of 1938, seeking out new recruits for D.C.’s major league baseball team. When he watched Forrest “Lefty” Brewer pitch for the St. Augustine Saints that summer, the scout had no doubt that this was a player who could help turn around the struggling D.C. club. On June 6, 1938, Brewer threw a no hitter in the minor leagues. Exactly six years later he jumped out of a plane over Normandy, France on D-Day.

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DC
'Simply and literally stunning': Washington Reacts to the D-Day Invasion

'Simply and literally stunning': Washington Reacts to the D-Day Invasion

06/06/2019 in DC by Hannah Schuster

By mid 1944, Washingtonians had known for some time that a major invasion of Europe was in store. But when news of D-Day came on June 6, 1944, it was still a sobering event. The city reacted with a combination of pause and activity.

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Virginia
"Right Out Our Front Door": The Pentagon, East Arlington and Queen City

"Right Out Our Front Door": The Pentagon, East Arlington and Queen City

03/23/2018 in Virginia by Anne Hollmuller

East Arlington and Queen City were two tight-knit African American communities that forged a strong and independent existence despite the perils of Jim Crow. Yet the rapid expansion of federal government and the pressing demands of World War II endangered all that these Arlington residents had built together and, quite literally, wiped it off the map.

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DC
Bert Shepard: The Washington Senators' "One Legged War Hero"

Bert Shepard: The Washington Senators' "One Legged War Hero"

01/19/2018 in DC by Mark Jones

Is it possible for a man to play Major League Baseball with one leg? Not for most men, but most men aren't Bert Shepard who played for the Washington Senators in 1945 after losing his right leg in World War II.

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DC
Glenn Miller’s Army Air Force Band Disbands

Glenn Miller’s Army Air Force Band Disbands

11/09/2017 in DC by Emily Robinson

On Nov. 13, 1945, the National Press Club hosted a dinner honoring President Harry Truman at Hotel Statler. The 1,000 person guest list featured a virtual who’s who of Washington’s political elite, but more than anything, attendees looked forward to a performance by Glenn Miller’s famous Army Air Force Band. While festive, the evening was also bittersweet, for the band was without its leader. Nearly a year earlier, Major Glenn Miller, famous bandleader and trombonist, had gone missing over the English Channel, while traveling from England to France to give concerts to the troops liberating Europe. 

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DC
From Statistics to Stories: The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's First Person Program

From Statistics to Stories: The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's First Person Program

08/09/2017 in DC by Lindsay Dillon

For the past 18 years, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has hosted the First Person program each summer. These programs are open to the public, and allow musuem visitors to listen to personal stories of Holocaust survivors, and to engage with them.

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