Based in the Central Business District, National World War II Museum is one of the most popular attractions of New Orleans. The museum reveals the story of the World War II right from its outbreak in 1939 until Germany's and Japan surrender in 1945. The four interactive galleries in the mu...
Sarens recently transported the foundation pillars for the Bollinger Canopy of Peace at the World War II Museum in New Orleans. These seven pillars will support the entire canopy structure, which stands 150 feet tall and is designed to unify the museum campus. The pillars were trucked in by ...
Today, the National World War II Museum in New Orleans debuts its newest attraction: an immersive film called Beyond all Boundaries, full of bells, whistles and warplanes, that goes to great lengths (some might say too far) to make you feel as if you're in 1940s Europe. Here's why th...
The International Conference on World War II is the premier adult educational event bringing together the best and brightest scholars, authors, historians, and witnesses to history from around the globe to discuss key battles, personalities, strategies, issues, and controversies ofthe war that changed...
Museum in New Orleans can still "talk" to him, thanks to voice recognition software and artificial intelligence. By posing questions, answers from interviews conducted with Speranza and other veterans can be played, preserving not just the stories of World War II, but also the people who lived...
The National World War II Museum is committed to illuminating America’s contribution to World War II via compelling artifacts and engaging exhibits. Investigate engaging displays, take in eye-catching artifacts, and converse with first-person stories. Learn more about how the war affected society, ...
“Both Germany and Japan had been really getting ready for World War II for about a decade,” saysRob Wallace, the STEM education specialist at The National WWII Museum in New Orleans. With the onset of the war, the British government developed planes based on Whittle’s designs. The first...
It is on display at the National Museum of World War Two in New Orleans, LA, and was built five miles away at the former Higgins City Park Plant in October 1944. The date of manufacturer of October 1944 may seem strange. By this point in the war the LCVP was the desired landing ...
Remembering D-Day New Orleans Museum Tribute to World War II InvasionRemembering D-Day New Orleans Museum Tribute to World War II Invasion"World War II's veterans are dying now at a rate of 1,500 a day. And the total's ever-rising...By ArturoGonzalez...