Battles & Campaigns
Key Figures
Technology & Gear
The Home Front
Turning Points
100

Code-named Operation Overlord, this massive 1944 Allied invasion took place on the beaches of Normandy.

D-Day

100

This British Prime Minister famously vowed that his nation would "never surrender" during the Blitz.

Winston Churchill

100

This top-secret American project led to the development of the first atomic bombs.

Manhattan Project

100

This iconic cultural figure represented the millions of American women who worked in factories and shipyards.

Rosie the Riveter

100

This June 1942 naval battle is considered the turning point of the war in the Pacific.

Midway

200

This 1941 surprise attack on a U.S. naval base in Hawaii brought the United States into the war.

Pearl Harbor

200

He was the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe and later became the 34th U.S. President.

Dwight D. Eisenhower

200

The Germans used this famous "unbreakable" machine to send encrypted radio messages.

Enigma

200

To ensure fair distribution of scarce goods like sugar, meat, and gasoline, governments issued these to citizens.

Ration Stamps/Books

200

This 1945 conference saw the "Big Three" leaders meet to discuss the post-war reorganization of Germany and Europe.

Yalta Conference

300

This brutal winter battle in the Soviet Union is often cited as the bloodiest in human history and a major defeat for Germany.

Stalingrad

300

Known as the "Desert Fox," this German field marshal was respected by both sides for his tactical skill in North Africa.

Erwin Rommel

300

This British invention used radio waves to detect incoming enemy aircraft before they could be seen.

Radar

300

These Japanese-American citizens were forcibly relocated to "relocation centers" in the U.S. interior following Executive Order 9066.

Internment Camps

300

The capture of this island in 1945 provided a vital base for long-range bombers and produced the famous flag-raising photo.

Iwo Jima

400

This desert campaign saw the British "Desert Rats" face off against Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Korps.

El Alamein (North African Campaign)

400

This Emperor of Japan remained on the throne after the war ended, despite the country's surrender.

Hirohito

400

This Soviet tank, the T-34, is often considered the most effective and influential tank design of the war.

T-34 Tank

400

These "Victory" plots were planted by civilians in private residences and public parks to reduce the pressure on the food supply.

Victory gardens

400

This 1944 German counter-offensive in the Ardennes forest was their last major attempt to push back the Allies in the West.

Battle of the Bulge

500

During this 1940 operation, over 300,000 Allied soldiers were evacuated from French beaches by a fleet of "little ships."

Dunkirk

500

This U.S. General famously declared "I shall return" after being forced to evacuate the Philippines in 1942.

Douglas MacArthur

500

Allied codebreakers at Bletchley Park used this early electromechanical device to crack the German Enigma code.

The Bombe.

500

This 1944 U.S. bill provided veterans with funds for college education, unemployment insurance, and housing loans.

G.I. Bill.

500
This 1942 battle in Egypt halted the Axis advance toward the Suez Canal

El Alamein