Stalingrad, fought from 1942 to 1943, was one of the
deadliest battles in history and a major turning point on the Eastern Front.
German forces entered the city and fought brutal street-by-street combat, but
Soviet forces counterattacked and encircled the German 6th Army. Hitler refused
to allow a breakout, and the encircled army eventually surrendered.
Its importance was enormous. Stalingrad destroyed a major
German army, shattered the aura of German invincibility, and shifted the
strategic initiative toward the Soviet Union. After Stalingrad, the Red Army
increasingly drove the Axis westward.
The First Battle of the Marne was fought in September 1914,
early in World War I. German armies had advanced rapidly toward Paris, but
French and British forces counterattacked when the German right wing became
overstretched and exposed. The Germans withdrew, and the immediate bid to win
the war quickly failed.
This battle mattered because it stopped the German drive on
Paris and helped turn the war into a long trench stalemate. The “Miracle on the
Marne” became one of the first major signs that the war would not be short or easy.
Waterloo was fought on 18 June 1815 near present-day Belgium
and ended Napoleon’s return from exile. Wellington’s Anglo-allied army held
defensive ground against repeated French attacks until Prussian forces under
Blücher arrived and struck Napoleon’s flank. The French army collapsed, and
Napoleon’s rule was over.
The battle ended the Napoleonic era in Europe. It restored a
balance of power led by the major coalitions against France and became one of
the most consequential military defeats in European history. Waterloo also
fixed Napoleon’s image in history as both a genius commander and a fallen
emperor.
Saratoga was actually a campaign fought in two major actions
in 1777, Freeman’s Farm and Bemis Heights. British General John Burgoyne
advanced south from Canada but became overextended, short of supplies, and
unable to secure the support he expected. American forces under Horatio Gates,
with key battlefield leadership from Benedict Arnold, held their ground and
eventually forced Burgoyne’s surrender.
Its importance was diplomatic as much as military. Saratoga convinced
France that the Americans had a real chance to win, helping bring French
support into the Revolutionary War. That alliance changed the war from a
colonial rebellion into a global struggle against Britain.
These battles matter for different reasons, but they share a
common pattern: each one changed the strategic balance far beyond the
battlefield itself. Some became cultural touchstones as much as military
events. Others directly changed the map of power in their eras.
Battle of Tours
Tours, fought in 732, pitted Frankish forces under Charles
Martel against an Umayyad raiding army in Gaul. Charles chose strong defensive
ground, which reduced the effectiveness of cavalry assaults by the Muslim
force. The Umayyad commander Abd al-Rahman was killed, and the raiding army
withdrew.
Its broader significance is debated, but the victory
certainly strengthened Frankish power and helped check further Umayyad
penetration into western Europe. It also fed the later image of Charles Martel
as the defender of Christian Europe. The battle became more famous in later
memory than it was in immediate medieval politics.
Battle of Hastings
Hastings was fought on 14 October 1066 between William of
Normandy and King Harold II of England. Harold had just forced back another
invasion in the north and then marched rapidly south to face William, leaving
his army tired and perhaps understrength. After hours of fighting, Norman
tactics, including feigned retreats, helped break the English line, and Harold
was killed.
The consequences were transformative. Norman victory
replaced the Anglo-Saxon ruling elite with a new aristocracy, reshaped
landholding patterns, and deeply altered English political culture and
language. Hastings is one of the clearest examples of a battle that changed the
course of a national history.
These battles matter for different reasons, but they share a common pattern: each one changed the strategic balance far beyond the battlefield itself. Some became cultural touchstones as much as military events. Others directly changed the map of power in their eras.
Battle of Marathon
One: Battle of
Marathon
Fought in 490 BC on the plain of Marathon, this battle was
part of the first Persian invasion of Greece. Athens faced a much larger
Persian force sent by Darius I. The Athenians, led in practice by Miltiades,
used disciplined hoplite infantry to attack and defeat the Persians, preventing
a direct move on Athens itself.
Its importance was both military and symbolic. The victory
showed that Persian forces could be beaten in open battle by Greek heavy
infantry, and it gave Athens a powerful sense of civic confidence. It also
became a foundational story for later Greek identity and resistance to empire.
Two: Battle of Thermopylae
Thermopylae took place in 480 BC during Xerxes’ massive
invasion of Greece. A small Greek force, led by King Leonidas and his Spartans,
held a narrow mountain pass against the Persians, using the terrain to
neutralize Persian numbers. The Greeks resisted for several days before flanked
by the Persians.
Militarily, the battle was a defeat, but strategically it
mattered a great deal. It delayed Xerxes’ advance and gave other Greek states
time to prepare, while the Spartan stand became a lasting emblem of sacrifice,
discipline, and duty. The story of the “300” outlived the battlefield itself
and became one of antiquity’s most enduring symbols of heroic resistance.
Three: Battle of
Gaugamela
Gaugamela was fought in 331 BC between Alexander the Great
and Darius III of Persia. Alexander’s army was smaller, but it was highly
mobile and tightly coordinated, while the Persians tried to use their numerical
advantage on open ground. Alexander maneuvered to stretch the Persian line,
then struck at a vulnerable point with his elite cavalry, causing the Persian
center to collapse and Darius to flee.
The result was decisive. Gaugamela effectively ended Persia
as a major independent imperial power and opened the Near East to Macedonian
rule. It also confirmed Alexander’s reputation as one of history’s great
battlefield commanders.
These battles matter for different reasons, but they share a
common pattern: each one changed the strategic balance far beyond the
battlefield itself. Some became cultural touchstones as much as military
events. Others directly changed the map of power in their eras.
Battle of Cannae
Cannae was fought in 216 BC during the Second Punic War,
when Hannibal met a far larger Roman army in southern Italy. Hannibal used a
classic double-envelopment plan: his center gradually yielded, the Romans
pushed forward, and his cavalry and infantry closed in from the sides and rear.
The Roman army was trapped and destroyed in one of history’s most famous
encirclements.
The battle is still studied because it demonstrates how a
commander can use terrain, discipline, timing, and deception to defeat a
numerically superior enemy. Rome survived, but Cannae was a catastrophic shock
that reshaped Roman military thinking.
Siege of Alesia
Alesia, in 52 BC, was the climactic showdown of Caesar’s
Gallic Wars. The Gauls withdrew into a fortified hilltop settlement.Caesar chose not to storm it directly and
instead built siege lines around the town to trap the defenders. When a large
Gallic relief army arrived, Caesar added an outer defensive line so he could
fight both the trapped garrison and the relieving force at once.
Caesar’s victory was strategically huge. It broke the main
organized Gallic resistance and cemented Roman dominance in Gaul. Politically,
it also enhanced Caesar’s prestige enormously, helping set the stage for his
rise in Rome.
Battle of Teutoburg Forest
In AD 9, Germanic tribes led by Arminius ambushed the Roman
legions of Publius Quinctilius Varus in the Teutoburg Forest. The Romans were
drawn into broken terrain and stretched out in bad weather, which made their
formation vulnerable to repeated attacks. Over several days, three Roman
legions were destroyed and Varus killed.
The defeat had major consequences. Rome abandoned plans for
expansion deep into Germania east of the Rhine, and the river became a
long-term frontier between Roman and Germanic worlds. In Roman memory, the
disaster was a trauma comparable to the worst defeats of the Republic and early
Empire.
Historians
debate rankings, but these ten battles are very commonly cited as the most
famous sea battles in world history.
One: The
Battle of Salamis (480 BCE)
Greek city-state fleet defeated a much larger Persian force near Athens,
halting Persian expansion in Greece and shaping the future of Western
civilization.
Two: Battle
of Actium (31 BCE)
Octavian’s fleet beat the combined forces of Antony and Cleopatra off western
Greece, paving the way for Octavian to become Augustus and establish the Roman
Empire.
Three: Battle
of Red Cliffs (Chibi) (208–209 CE)
Allied southern Chinese warlords used fire attacks and river tactics on the
Yangtze to stop Cao Cao’s massive fleet, ensuring China remained politically
divided and inspiring one of its most famous historical epics.
Four: Battle
of Yamen (1279)
The Mongol Yuan fleet crushed the last Song loyalist navy off southern China,
ending the Song dynasty and completing Mongol conquest of China.
Five: Battle
of Lepanto (1571)
A Christian “Holy League” fleet decisively defeated the Ottoman navy in the
Gulf of Patras; it was the last great battle of large Mediterranean oar-powered
galleys and a major check on Ottoman sea power.
Six: Defeat
of the Spanish Armada / Gravelines (1588)
English and allied ships disrupted and broke the Spanish Armada in the Channel
and off Gravelines, thwarting Philip II’s invasion plan and marking a turning
point in Atlantic power politics.
Seven: Battle
of Trafalgar (1805)
Nelson’s British fleet shattered the combined French–Spanish line off Cape
Trafalgar, eliminating Napoleon’s realistic hope of invading Britain and
confirming British naval dominance for the 19th century.
Eight: Battle
of Tsushima (1905)
The Japanese fleet annihilated the Russian Baltic Fleet in the Tsushima Strait,
the first time an Asian power defeated a major European navy, with huge
consequences for imperial politics and pre–First World War balances.
Nine: Battle
of Jutland (1916)
Only full-scale battleship fleet clash of the First World War; tactically
inconclusive but strategically preserved British control of the North Sea and
the blockade that helped wear down Germany.
Ten: Battle
of Midway (1942) Decisive U.S. victory that sank four Japanese carriers,
blunting Japan’s offensive capability in the Pacific and shifting the balance
of the war.
Nathan Bedford Forrest, the
daring Confederate cavalry general, surrendered his forces in May 1865 near
Gainesville, Alabama. Returning to Memphis penniless, he engaged in various
business ventures, including lumber merchandising and planting, but faced
financial ruin from failed investments. From 1866 to 1869, Forrest served as
president of the Selma, Marion and Memphis Railroad, attempting to rebuild the
South's infrastructure. In his later years, he leased land on President's
Island, managing an 800-acre farm using convict labor, which critics likened to
slavery due to harsh conditions like bloodhounds and corporal punishment.
Forrest was instrumental in founding
the Ku Klux Klan, becoming its first Grand Wizard by 1867.The Klan led violent campaigns against Black
voters and Republicans. Forrest publicly ordered the KKK's dissolution in 1869,
citing its excesses. His declaration had
little effect, and few Klansmen destroyed their robes and hoods.
On July 5, 1875, Forrest addressed a Black civic
organization in Memphis, praising Black advancement, calling for racial
harmony, and even accepting a bouquet from a young Black woman and kissing her
on the cheek. Contemporary newspapers described the speech as “friendly,” and
Forrest explicitly encouraged peace between Black and white Southerners.
This moment is often cited as
a dramatic departure from his earlier life as a slave trader, Confederate
general responsible for the Fort Pillow massacre, and first Grand Wizard of the
Ku Klux Klan.Forrest appears to have
undergone a personal softening in his final years, including a strong turn
toward religion.The depth of this
transformation is uncertain, and historians disagree on whether it reflected
genuine repentance, political calculation, or a mix of both.
Forrest died on October 29,
1877, at age 56 in Memphis from diabetes complications.
Here is a
widely accepted “top ten” list of famous U.S. naval battles, focusing on
historical impact and public recognition.
One: Battle
of Lake Erie (War of 1812, 1813)
Gave the U.S.
control of Lake Erie against the Royal Navy; Oliver Hazard Perry’s report, “We
have met the enemy and they are ours,” became iconic.
Two: Battle
of Manila Bay (Spanish‑American War, 1898)
Commodore
George Dewey’s Asiatic Squadron destroyed Spain’s Pacific fleet, signaling the
emergence of the U.S. as a major naval power.
Three: Attack
on Pearl Harbor (World War II, 1941)
Japanese
carrier strike that crippled much of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, drew the United
States fully into World War II, and transformed naval warfare around carriers.
Four: Battle
of Coral Sea (World War II, 1942)
First battle
fought entirely by carrier‑launched aircraft with opposing fleets never in
visual range; a strategic U.S.–Allied victory that helped set up Midway.
Five: Battle
of Midway (World War II, 1942)
Decisive U.S.
victory that sank four Japanese carriers, blunting Japan’s offensive capability
in the Pacific and shifting the balance of the war.
Six: Naval
Battles of Guadalcanal (World War II, 1942–1943)
Series of
fierce surface and carrier actions around the Solomon Islands that halted
Japanese expansion and began sustained U.S. offensive operations.
Seven: (World
War II, 1944)
Massive
carrier battle often called the “Great Marianas Turkey Shoot,” which shattered
Japanese naval aviation and secured U.S. control of the central Pacific.
Eight: Battle
of Leyte Gulf (World War II, 1944)
Generally
considered the largest naval battle in history; U.S. and Allied forces
decisively defeated the Japanese fleet during the liberation of the Philippines.
Nine: Battle
of the Atlantic (World War II, 1939–1945, with major U.S. role from 1941)
Long campaign
rather than a single battle, but U.S. Navy and Allied navies’ anti‑submarine
warfare against German U‑boats was vital to keeping Britain supplied.
America's patriotism is
steeped in quirky history, from revolutionary quirks to modern symbols. Here
are ten odd facts that highlight the nation's eccentric spirit.
One: In 1917, the government briefly
tried to rename hamburgers “liberty
sandwiches” to avoid the German association.
Two: The back of the Declaration bears
an upside-down message: "Original Declaration of Independence dated 4th
July 1776."
Three: Three U.S. presidents—John
Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Monroe—died on July 4th, adding eerie
coincidence to the holiday.
Four: The Liberty Bell hasn't rung
since 1846, but it's symbolically tapped 13 times each Independence Day to
honor the original colonies.
Five: The Liberty Bell is one of the most famous cracked objects in
history—yet the crack people recognize today was actually a repair attempt that failed, leaving
the bell permanently silent.
Six: The 50-star American flag was
designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project, earning him a B-
until it was adopted.
Seven: Thomas Jefferson drafted the
Declaration on a "laptop"—a portable writing desk that fit over the
lap.
Eight: Americans devour about 150
million hot dogs on July 4th, making it the biggest hot dog day of the year.
Nine: Six U.S. flags stand on the moon
from Apollo missions, proving patriotism reaches extraterrestrial heights.
Ten:
Benjamin Franklin preferred the turkey over the bald eagle as the national bird, arguing the
turkey was more respectable and less prone to stealing.
The Confederate Army, vastly
outnumbered and chronically short of supplies, fought with desperate ingenuity,
deception, and eccentricity for four brutal years. Its soldiers blended
old-world grit with makeshift innovation. Here are ten of the oddest things
about the Confederate army:
One: Silk-Dress Sky Spies: Southern ladies donated silk dresses
so the fabric could be sewn into observation balloons for scouting Union
positions.
Two: Camel Pack Train: Captured U.S. Army camels, hauled
supplies across the arid Southwest.
Three: Lemon-Sucking Stonewall: General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson
constantly carried and sucked lemons, convinced they cured his dyspepsia and
restored bodily balance.
Four: Quaker Guns: Painted wooden logs mounted on fake
carriages mimicked real cannons, fooling Union scouts at Centreville, Port
Hudson, and elsewhere.
Five: Secret Sisters: Hundreds of women cut their hair,
bound their chests, and enlisted as men, fighting undetected until wounded or
discovered.
Six: Boy and Graybeard Army: Conscription swept in boys as young
as 14 and gray-haired men over 50, especially in the war’s desperate final
years.
Seven: Twenty Negro Law: Owners of 20 or more enslaved people
could exempt one white overseer from the draft—sparking bitter cries of “rich
man’s war, poor man’s fight.”
Eight: Worthless Wages: Soldiers’ pay in Confederate scrip
inflated so wildly that a month’s wages bought almost nothing; many went unpaid
for months.
Nine: Deadly Torpedoes: The Confederacy pioneered buried
explosive land mines (“torpedoes”) that terrorized advancing Union infantry.
Ten: Native Warriors: Cherokee, Choctaw, and other tribal
regiments served; Brigadier General Stand Watie, a Cherokee leader, became the
last Confederate general to surrender.
The
Pledge originated in1892, when Francis
Bellamy, a former Baptist minister, penned it for The Youth's Companion
magazine as part of a Columbus Day celebration marking the 400th anniversary of
Christopher Columbus's arrival. Bellamy's original version reads: "I
pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands, one nation
indivisible, with liberty and justice for all." It was designed to foster
national unity amid post-Civil War healing and waves of immigration, promoting "true
Americanism" through public education.
Over
the decades, the Pledge evolved. In 1923-1924, "my Flag" became
"the Flag of the United States of America" to clarify loyalty.
Initially accompanied by the Bellamy Salute—an extended arm gesture reminiscent
of the Roman salute—it was changed in 1942 to the hand-over-heart position due
to its similarity to the Nazi salute during World War II.
In
1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed legislation inserting "under
God" to differentiate the U.S. from "godless" communism during
the Cold War.
Number 1: Washington Crossing the
Delaware (1851) by
Emanuel Leutze: This dramatic scene shows General Washington leading troops
across icy waters, symbolizing determination during the Revolutionary War.
Number 2: The
Death of General Wolfe (1770) by Benjamin West: Capturing the British
victory in the French and Indian War, it portrays the fallen general amid his
troops, blending heroism with tragedy.
Number 3: The Spirit of '76 (1875) by Archibald Willard: Also
known as Yankee Doodle, it features three patriots marching with fife and drum,
evoking Revolutionary fervor.
Number 4: The Declaration of
Independence (1819)
by John Trumbull: Depicting the founding fathers presenting the document, this
painting highlights the ideological roots of American military efforts.
Number 5: Surrender of Lord Cornwallis (1820) by John Trumbull: Illustrating
the British defeat at Yorktown, it marks the end of the Revolutionary War with
allied forces triumphant.
Number 6: The Battle of Bunker Hill (1786) by John Trumbull: A chaotic
portrayal of the early Revolutionary clash, focusing on the death of patriot
Joseph Warren.
Number 7: The March to Valley Forge (1883) by William Trego: Showing
Washington's weary army in winter, it underscores endurance amid hardship.
Number 8: Prisoners from the Front (1866) by Winslow Homer: A Civil War
scene of Union capture of Confederates, reflecting division and humanity.
Number 9: Grant and His Generals (1865) by Ole Peter Hansen Balling:
Honoring Union leaders on horseback, celebrating Civil War strategy.
Number 10: The Peacemakers (1868) by George Healy: Lincoln
conferring with Grant and Sherman aboard ship, symbolizing the path to Civil
War victory.
After his severe wounding at
Gettysburg in 1863, Major General Winfield Scott Hancock, known as
"Hancock the Superb," continued commanding the II Corps through the
Overland Campaign and Petersburg Siege. Debilitated by his injury, he
relinquished field command in November 1864, overseeing the First Veterans
Corps in Washington, D.C., and the Middle Military Department in the Shenandoah
Valley. In July 1865, he supervised the execution of the Lincoln assassination
conspirators.
During Reconstruction, Hancock
commanded the Department of the Missouri and Dakota before leading the Fifth
Military District in New Orleans from 1867. His lenient policies toward former
Confederates drew criticism from Radical Republicans but earned Southern favor.
In the late 1860’s he led an unspectacular campaign to subdue the Plains
Indians before being relieved by General Philip Sheridan.
A lifelong Democrat, Hancock ran for
president in 1880, narrowly losing to James A. Garfield in a close popular vote
(losing by fewer than 8,000 ballots) but decisively in the Electoral College.
He remained in military service until his death on February 9, 1886, from
diabetes complications at age 61.