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The National WWII Museum @UCmTCST8yVyVMctEYY9WeMWw@youtube.com

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The National WWII Museum tells the story of the American exp


Welcoem to posts!!

in the future - u will be able to do some more stuff here,,,!! like pat catgirl- i mean um yeah... for now u can only see others's posts :c

The National WWII Museum
Posted 1 year ago

Masters of the Air — In Memory | Apple TV+

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The National WWII Museum
Posted 1 year ago

Podcast 1 of The National WWII Museum's "Making Masters of the Air" is available now! Hosts Kirk Saduski and Donald Miller interview world-renowned actor, filmmaker, and executive producer of the series, Tom Hanks. Listen now here:

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The National WWII Museum
Posted 1 year ago

The fourth and final episode of "World War II On Topic: Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project" is out today! In this episode, Jason Dawsey, PhD, and John Curatola, PhD, historians with the Museum’s Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy, discuss the legacy of the Manhattan Project.

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The National WWII Museum
Posted 1 year ago

The third episode of "World War II On Topic: Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project" is out! In this episode, we hear from two extraordinary people who experienced the bombing of Hiroshima, albeit from vastly different perspectives. While much has been written and said on the subject, these are firsthand recollections, excerpted from the oral histories given by Theodore “Dutch” Van Kirk and Ittsei Nakagawa. Click here to listen now:

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The National WWII Museum
Posted 1 year ago

The second episode of "World War II On Topic: Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project" is out! In this episode, historians Jason Dawsey, PhD, and John Curatola, PhD, of the Museum’s Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy discuss the new film "Oppenheimer."

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The National WWII Museum
Posted 1 year ago

On April 1, 1943, the United States established a research laboratory in the mountains of New Mexico. Referred to as Project Y, it was the designation for the top-secret design and production of the atomic bombs for the Manhattan Project. General Leslie Groves, director of the Manhattan Project, chose theoretical physicist Robert Oppenheimer to lead Project Y, today better known as the Los Alamos Laboratory.

Listen to The National WWII Museum's first episode of "World War II On Topic: Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project" here:

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