World War II saw a wide variety of tanks deployed by Allied and Axis forces, but one of the strangest of the era was a British model that, despite some useful features, never actually saw its way into ...
The Germans attacked and captured France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Belgium (The Battle of France). The British Army was forced to retreat through Dunkirk via Operation Dynamo, saving some ...
Here’s What You Need To Remember: The tank was promptly rejected by the Marine Corps. It served briefly in the Army, helping to drive the Japanese off of the Aleutian islands they had occupied, before ...
On April 24, 1943, John Oscroft was ordered to take and hold an enemy position identified as Point 174 alongside the 2nd Battalion Sherwood Foresters; it would be the young man’s first time seeing ...
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Strange Features found on Tanks
There have been more than a few wacky features on tanks through the years. Here’s a few. The British are notorious tea-drinkers. Since British tank crews are apt to stop and take their afternoon tea ...
There’s nothing easy about riding in a M36 Jackson tank destroyer. In a dirt field behind the American Heritage Museum in Hudson, the approximately 32-ton machine roars and exhales gas fumes. If ...
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