The Six Triple Eight, a military battalion made up of 855 Black women during World War II, included 19 from Maryland.
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth had referred to Fort Benning and Fort Bragg by their original, Confederate-inspired names.
Retired 1st Sgt. Mark Matthews was a soldier who saw the U.S. Army evolve from horse-mounted cavalry to diesel-driven, ...
Bragg is back,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said after signing a memorandum on the name change Monday night.
The character's legacy and enduring popularity is stunning, even to Morrell himself: "Rambo" made it into the Oxford English ...
The renaming of Fort Bragg now remembers a toxic gas handler who served in World War II, Private First Class Roland Bragg.
Posthumously honoring a soldier from World War II, the world’s largest military base in North Carolina will become known ...
“By instead invoking the name of World War II soldier Private Roland Bragg, Secretary Hegseth has not violated the letter of the law, but he has violated its spirit," Reed said in a statement ...