The Choctaw Nation and Texas Historical Commission unveiled a historical marker in Fort Worth last week to honor the tribe’s ...
TAMA - Eight Meskwaki guardsmen in 1941 learned to use their native tongue for covert military communications. Newspapers printed various photos of the men in training before the United States joined ...
$14.95; 256 pages. In the early months of World War II, Japanese cryptographers, many of whom were graduates of American universities, had been extremely successful in unraveling U.S. military codes ...
GALLUP — Zonnie Gorman remembers the first time she saw an old photo of a group of young, sleek, clean-cut Navajo men — men who would go on to become the Navajo Code Talkers during World War II. The ...
Aug. 14 is National Navajo Code Talker Day, an annual celebration recognizing the Code Talkers who served with the U.S. Marine Corps in the Pacific theater during World War II. The designation was ...
Navajo Code Talkers were a group of Marines in World War II who used their native language to transmit crucial military communications, creating a secret, unbreakable code that was vital to Allied ...
A new Texas Historical Marker in Fort Worth honors the 19 men from Oklahoma who used their native language to send codes.
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