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Wounds and mustard gas could not stop Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Orlando Petty in 1918, but they may have caught up with him in 1932. Military Times Story by Jon Guttman ...
STEENSTRATE, Belgium — As a spring breeze wafted into his trench, commander Georges Lamour of the French 73rd infantry saw something almost surreal drift his way. A yellow-green cloud. He barely ...
STEENSTRATE, Belgium – As a spring breeze wafted into his trench, commander Georges Lamour of the French 73rd infantry saw something almost surreal drift his way. A yellow-green cloud. He barely ...
Some 1,200 French soldiers were killed in the chaos of that first 5-minute gas attack and the fighting that followed. Lamour, like scores of comrades, was never found. "You drown in your own lungs ...
They found the French WWI helmet, called Adrian, outperformed them all By MICHAEL THOMSEN FOR DAILYMAIL.COM Published: 12:51 EDT, 17 February 2020 | Updated: 17:49 EDT, 18 February 2020 ...
Workers in green rubber jumpsuits and gas masks gingerly loaded rusty shells of mustard gas and other chemical weapons into trucks Sunday as they prepared to clear a stockpile of World War I ...
Take the most famous canine hero of the war, Sergeant Stubby of the 102nd Infantry Regiment, ... his owner John Robert Conroy of the 102nd Infantry Regiment bought a French canine gas mask.
Wounds and mustard gas could not stop Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Orlando Petty in 1918, but they may have caught up with him in 1932.
Wounds and mustard gas could not stop Medal of Honor recipient Lt. Orlando Petty in 1918, but they may have caught up with him in 1932.