a WWI ship that sank after being torpedoed by a German U-boat in 1914. Diver Steve Mortimer told the BBC that the wreck is a "really remarkable time capsule." The Tobol had been missing for over ...
A tiny green refuge in Brooklyn honoring locals who died fighting in World War I is tucked away in a 3,000-square-foot park — mysteriously padlocked most days and hidden beneath overgrown brush.
The 58-foot-long bronze sculpture follows the story of an unnamed World War I soldier, beginning on the day he takes his helmet from his daughter’s hands and ships out. It shows anguished scenes ...
While the 58-foot-long bronze sculpture will now be the country's foremost WWI memorial, it is far from the first. Community leaders, historians, and veterans have commemorated past residents who ...
The family of Australian digger Private Richard Norman Hanna has finally been able to acknowledge his service with a military headstone. Private Hanna was one of thousands of soldiers buried in ...
Russian merchant vessel Tobol - originally SS Cheltenham - was torpedoed by a German U-boat in 1917. ScottishPower and Shell are behind the proposed MarramWind offshore windfarm about 75km (46 ...
The Edgar-class protected cruiser, the HMS Hawke, was torpedoed by a German U-boat in 1914 in an attack that killed 524 sailors. Divers found Royal Navy crockery still sitting in the ship’s rooms.
This is a game that is set in the muddy trenches of WW1 and uses a 50v50 multiplayer ... For instance, you may decide to build up more troops, aircraft, or ships for naval warfare.
Utah had been one of the pre-WWI battleships but had been repurposed ... The Japanese torpedo bombers were instructed not to ...
The last time Charles McAllister’s family heard from him was in December 1917, when the 23-year-old Washington State Guard private first class penned a letter to his sister just before setting ...
"Australia's first battle of the Great War occurred in September 1914, just a month after the outbreak of WWI and close to home in neighbouring Papua New Guinea (then German New Guinea)," says ...