The unexploded ordnance, discovered during a site renovation, were described as “practice bombs” that still carry a charge ...
It is believed the area where the playground was initially built was used as a Home Guard training ground and the bombs were buried at the end of the war.
Peebles kept living and marked his 100th birthday on Monday. Family came from all over, including his baby sister who is 91. His daughter says there's much to be proud of. "He's been what they call a ...
Denver’s weed church, zodiac predictions for the Year of the Snake, plus what promises to be London’s most ambitious – and ...
After more than 80 years hidden beneath the waves off Rio de Janeiro, the location of a Brazilian troop transport ship ...
Don Swank, 98, is a World War II veteran whose family is raising funds to help keep him at Churchill Retirement Home in ...
Harry Stewart Jr. was one of the legendary flying corps’ most decorated pilots during the WWII, having claimed three Nazi ...
Having fun while learning isn’t only for children’s summer camps. The Castle in Marietta held its annual All Ages History ...
Over 160 unexploded practice bombs dating all the way back to World War II have been discovered underneath a children’s playground in the United Kingdom, officials said.
Dozens of World War II bombs have been found during construction work at a childrens playground in northern England.
The massive post will now be called Fort Roland L. Bragg while in the past it was named for Gen. Braxton Bragg, a Confederate ...
Several stories published in the Times Leader Evening News and the Wilkes-Barre Record beginning Feb. 13, 1945, and throughout the month announced Mr. Alan B. Cutting and his wife, Mary, of Kingston ...