Why Do British Soldiers Wear Cap Badges, And What Do They Mean? by Zita Ballinger Fletcher4/20/20224/22/2022
How Gustav the Pigeon Broke the First News of the D-Day Landings by Zita Ballinger Fletcher4/5/20224/6/2024
From Crickets to Camels: One Historian Examines the Animal Cost of War by Sarah Richardson3/23/20224/5/2022
How Bobby the Antelope Became One of the British Army’s Cutest Mascots by Zita Ballinger Fletcher3/15/20224/5/2022
A Famous Dog of the Civil War: The Very Good Boy Who Fought (and Fetched) Alongside Soldiers by Nicholas Picerno2/22/20229/12/2022
World War II’s Only Canine POW Survived Shipwrecks, Crocodile Attacks, and Japanese Prison Camps by Steven Trent Smith10/1/20214/5/2022
How a Company Made A Bra for Every Type of Figure, Including WWII Carrier Pigeons by Claire Barrett12/22/20203/17/2022
Kuno, a British Military Working Dog, Awarded Highest Honor for Service Animals by Claire Barrett11/30/20203/17/2022