Pritzker Military Museum & Library Podcasts
Summary: Located in Chicago, the Pritzker Military Museum & Library is open to the public with live events and a collection of books, art, and artifacts that tell the story of the Citizen Soldier in American military history. This master feed will provide all available Library programs including events with award-winning authors, interviews with Medal of Honor recipients, and panel discussions on military issues. To view more than 300 previous Library programs, visit pritzkermilitary.org.
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- Artist: Pritzker Military Library
- Copyright: Copyright 2003-2013 Pritzker Military Library
Podcasts:
Noble Warrior: The Life and Times of Maj. Gen. James E. Livingston, USMC (Ret.) Medal of Honor
Bing West, a Marine combat veteran, served as an assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan administration.
James Hornfischer is also the author of Ship of Ghosts and The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors, winner of the Samuel Eliot Morison Award.
A recent poll by ABC News shows that 78% of those polled agree with the recent decision to repeal "Don't Ask Don't Tell". That's up 20% from a survey in the fall of 2010. In this program we'll take a look at the history of this policy, how its impact has changed...
Salvatore A. Giunta is the first living recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions in Iraq or Afghanistan, and the first living recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions which occurred since Vietnam.
The stories of The Last Good War are full of reflections on duty, courage, fear, pride, sacrifice, and loss.
From the beginning, the nation’s commander-in-chief and its capitalists have been uneasy partners in the American enterprise. But for a few decades, it was nothing short of love. In American Colossus, Brands chronicles an age when the railroads led the nation...
Heroes sometimes come from unlikely places. One day in 1917, a hero arrived in the New York National Guard by way of a cell at Sing Sing. Monk Eastman had been the most feared gangster in lower Manhattan.
In The Grand Design, Stoker charts the evolution of Union and Confederate strategies in the years between Fort Sumter and Appomattox, arguing that victory was not the inevitable result of Northern advantages in population or industry – it came down to the...
Technological innovations as far back as the chariot and the longbow were supposed to make foot soldiers obsolete, and yet they remain on the battlefield, taking on the hardest and most dangerous jobs under the most miserable conditions. No machine, however...
As a young man, returned from a tour of duty in Vietnam, he began writing an epic novel about the war he experienced and the way that combat changes people. More than thirty years later, his work is done. Matterhorn draws from Karl Marlantes’ experience...
In Eyes to the Horizon, Myers looks back over his military career, casting particular emphasis on the mistakes he believes were made in the aftermath of September 11th.
Fortress Rabaul describes the island’s role during the first year and a half of the war in the Pacific and the stories of the men who fought there, including Lt. Edward “Butch” O’Hare – who earned the Medal of Honor for turning back an entire wave...
For his first few months in Vietnam, Staff Sgt. Cavaiani felt like the war was passing him by. But when the war found him, Cavaiani was ready to prove his courage several times over.
The Enemy in Our Hands begins with the Revolution, when a captured British or Hessian officer could expect a relatively benign experience: housing in private residences or inns, permission to roam up to ten miles, and nothing more severe than having to sit...