Digitized photos, diaries, letters, posters, propaganda leaflets, films, interviews, and other material related to military conflicts - especially those involving Britain and the Commonwealth - from WWI to the present.
The Internet History Sourcebooks are collections of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts. Topics include Ancient, Medieval and Modern histories.
Based upon what President Truman called “the campaign of truth,” these leaflets became one of the primary means of winning the hearts and minds of enemy troops and Korean civilians.
Official website for U.S. naval history. Includes administrative histories and reports as well as links to other government and private historical museums, collections and organizations.
Offers access to 55,000 documents of the early War Department, many long thought irretrievable but now reconstructed through a multi-year research effort. Covers the history of the Early Republic, from the handling of Indian affairs, pensions and procurement to the nature of the first American citizens’ relationship with their new Federal government.
Collection of texts, photos, digitized images of military artifacts, and military publications. Material dates from the mid-1800s. Includes 23,000 photographs from the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS) from the Massachusetts Commandery, considered the single best Civil War photo collection in the world.
Information about Cuba, Guam, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Spain, and the United States is provided in chronologies, bibliographies, and a variety of pictorial and textual material from bilingual sources.