In 1942, two pictures were taken within kilometres of each other near Buna in Papua New Guinea. They were later called the ...
The most famous Australian photograph of World War II in New Guinea might never have seen the light if prime minister John ...
Military agencies were able to find the remains of Thomas V. Kelly, Jr., who was killed in March 1944 aboard a ship in the ...
After 80 years, a World War II veteran who went missing in action has been identified, and officials say the man was a ...
The United States was dragged unwillingly into World War II by the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, ...
It's one of the most iconic images of the war in the Pacific, but George Silk's photograph of a blinded Australian soldier being led by a barefoot Papuan on Christmas Day 1942 was captured by chance.
The remains of two Australian World War II officers have been positively identified, 79 years after their aircraft crashed in ...
Charles Moore was drafted into the Army in 1943. From there he traveled around the world until World War II ended.
From 1943 to 1946, Cecil Hill was a medic in the Pacific Theater, spending much of his time in New Guinea. It was a world he ...
Karla Grant learns about the experiences of the Indigenous peoples of Papua New Guinea during World War II, when two million foreign soldier fought battles on their land.