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kevana mcgough

The Price of Freedom: Stubby - 1 views

    • kevana mcgough
       
      A dog with a lot of medals national museum statue
  • Armed Forces History, Division of History of Technology, National Museum of American History
  • Armed Forces History, Division of History of Technology, National Museum of American History
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  • Armed Forces History, Division of History of Technology, National Mus
  • Armed Forces History, Division of History of Technology, National Museum of American History
  • Armed Forces History, Division of History of Technology, National Museum of American History
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    armed forces medals
florence palomo

BBC - Archive - WWII: Witnessing the Holocaust - Buchenwald Concentration Camp - 1 views

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    Edward Ward was a prisioner in Italy and Germany from 1941 until 1945, he was captured in Libya.
Jose Armando Zabaneh Erazo

ww2-american-flag.jpg 1,380×1,111 pixels - 0 views

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    world war two american soldieers victory 
chicky linares

BBC - History - World Wars: Nazi Propaganda - 1 views

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    nazi propaganda
alex llerena

BBC - Primary History - World War 2 - Growing up in wartime - 0 views

  • 'These Wrens (women in the Royal Navy) were making toys as Christmas gifts for local children in Liverpool.
    • alex llerena
       
      here it shows the girls making toys to give away to poor children in liverpool.
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    family entertainment, they heard the radio
Pao Molina

BBC - Primary History - World War 2 - Wartime homes - 0 views

  • Homes in the 1940s Many children in the 1940s lived in small houses or flats. In towns, many people lived in small terraced houses. There were blocks of flats too, though not as tall as the 'tower blocks' built after the war. A typical family house had a sitting room and kitchen, with two or three bedrooms upstairs. Not all houses had bathrooms or indoor toilets. Many houses had windows stuck over with paper tape. In an air raid, the blast-force of a bomb exploding could shatter windows along a street. Tape across the windows stopped the glass shattering into thousands of pieces, and causing injuries.
roe2018

BBC - Primary History - World War 2 - World at war - 0 views

  • In 1945 Allied troops freed prisoners from Nazi concentration camps. In these camps, millions of Jews and other prisoners had been killed or had died from hunger, disease and cruelty.
  • It's thought 6 million Jews were killed. Among the victims were many children. One young girl left a diary of her life in hiding, before she was captured. Her name was Anne Frank. She died, aged 15, in 1945 at the Bergen-Belsen prison camp.
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    This is a page were you can find out more about WW2.
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    WWII information of how it ended 
wendy wanda

The National WWII Museum | New Orleans: Learn: For Students: Research Starters: The Hol... - 1 views

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    This is information for what happened in the Holocaust.
cleo patra

Braunau-erkennt-Hitler-Heimatrecht-und-Ehrenbuergerschaft-ab.jpg 698×900 pixels - 0 views

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    adolf hitler as a baby
Fernando Vega

ABCICT - 8th Grade WW2 Diary and Letters Research Project - 0 views

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    http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-fkCrsWH0lgc/Uasct768NbI/AAAAAAAATdA/JwlZTL57BHI/s1600/10.jpg Image showing the plan of the D Day, a really important operation in WW2
Laura Monterrosa

WWII Letters - 0 views

  • 34th Bomb Squadron, 17th Group Lt. WWII Letter This letter was written by a Lt. who was with the 34th Bomb Squadron, 17th Group. That is the same squadron and group that the famous James Doolittle was with. The letter was written on July 19, 1944. From the letter….. My Dearest One,    Nothing much new and also it is quite late so as usual a short shorty to say hello and to let you know how much I love you.    At present I am listening to Bob Hope guess I forgot to tell you that we now have a radio. It is an Italian job, we bought it from Bohlan. He is going home so we took it off his hands. Spent a very busy day. Can’t remember doing a thing but I guess I did manage to stay on my feet.    Say I believe that a tan is developing, not sure as yet but the red seems to be changing color. At present I am quite a two tone job, imagine I will remain that way too because I don’t dare chance getting my rear sunburned (spend too much time on that thing) Hope you don’t get frightened when you see this two toned job
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    A lot of images of letters sent by soldiers to families and from families to soldiers...
alex llerena

BBC - Primary History - World War 2 - Daily life - 1 views

    • alex llerena
       
      Here it explains why people had to write letters to their families.
  • Not every home had a phone (and there were no mobile phones). Pay-phones in red 'telephone boxes' did not always work after air raids, because of bombs. To keep in touch, people wrote letters. Evacuees wrote postcards and letters home. Men and women in the Forces wrote home too. The sight of a messenger hurrying to a door with a telegram made people feel anxious. Telegrams often brought sad news - that someone had been killed in an air raid or in a bat
  • Friends and Neighbours With many parents away or at work, children were often left to look after themselves. They played in fields or in the street. Street games were safer than they would be today, because there were so few cars. Children helped clear up after air raids. They ran errands to the 'corner shop'. Older children looked after younger ones. Often neighbours and grandparents helped too. Many families were 'bombed out' (their homes were damaged by bombs). When this happened, neighbours offered food and beds, and lent clothes or furniture.
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  • A wartime kitchen. This lady's name was Mrs Haslet and she lived in London. She was photographed cooking a meal on her gas cooker.
  • This photo shows how blackout curtains fitted behind ordinary curtains. The girl in this 1943 photo was Doreen Buckner, then aged 7.
    • alex llerena
       
      here a girl is showing that behind her normal curtains there is a black curtain to protect her...
  • On 10 October 1940, Princess Elizabeth (now Queen Elizabeth II) spoke on the radio to children in the Commonwealth. Beside her is her
  • On 10 October 1940, Princess Elizabeth (now Queen Elizabeth II) spoke on the radio to children in the Commonwealth. Beside her is her
  • h II) spoke on the radio to children in the Commonwealth. Beside her is her
  • eth (now Queen Elizabeth II) spoke on the radio to children in the Co
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    friends, and neighbours,
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    a description of how they wrote the letters and also the description of The wartime kitchen
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    the wartime kitchen
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    This picture told people what to do if there was an air raid.
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