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The Civil War 150 is an immersive online experience, featuring infographics, historian picks and topical information, that highlights the 150 people, places, events and technology that defined America's greatest conflict. The interactive commemorates the Civil War's 150th Anniversary, and utilizes six thematic infographics to create an even more engaging "who knew?" experience:
Five Deadliest Battles – Nearly a quarter of a million men were killed or wounded during the five bloodiest clashes of the Civil War. Find out what happened at Gettysburg, Chickamauga, Chancellorsville, Spotsylvania Court House and the Wilderness.
Who They Were – Some wore blue and some wore gray, but the 3 million soldiers who fought in the Civil War had more in common than you might expect.
West Point Warriors – Almost 900 West Point alums served in the Civil War—in fact, they faced off against each other in 55 of the war's 60 major battles.
Paying for the War – Costing $146 billion in today's money, the Civil War saw rampant inflation—9000% in the South by the end of the war—and the first U.S. income tax.
Weapons of War – The Napoleon field gun, the minie ball, the Spencer repeating rifle, the telegraph and the railroad all helped to turn the tide of battle and changed the face of warfare forever.
How They Died – One in four soldiers—620,000 people—died as a result of the Civil War. That's 2 percent of the population—6.14 million people in today's terms.

Interactives (6)

Videos (47)

  • Spartans
    Spartans

    Video Clip (2:13)

    They were fierce warriors who prized military strength, but they were also the world's first democracy.

    Video Clip (2:13)
  • Napoleon
    Napoleon

    Video Clip (2:58)

    Small in stature, Napoleon Bonaparte left behind a huge legacy.

    Video Clip (2:58)
  • America and the Civil War
    America and the Civil War

    Video Clip (4:04)

    Discover how the bloodiest war in American history transformed the face of the nation.

    Video Clip (4:04)
  • WWI Firsts
    WWI Firsts

    Video Clip (1:18)

    WWI may have been the war to end all wars, but it was also the beginning of many military and civilian technologies.

    Video Clip (1:18)
  • Women in the Cockpit
    Women in the Cockpit

    Video Clip (3:52)

    Dawn Letson befriended a World War II veteran who was a member of the Women's Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) program, and shares her films from WASP training camp.

    Video Clip (3:52)
  • American Revolution
    American Revolution

    Video Clip (3:20)

    Get the story of how a fledgling, largely disconnected nation won its freedom from the greatest military force of its time.

    Video Clip (3:20)
  • The French Revolution
    The French Revolution

    Video Clip (2:49)

    Step into the the excitement and chaos of the French Revolution as told by musician and artist Jeffrey Lewis.

    Video Clip (2:49)
  • Vietnam
    Vietnam

    Video Clip (1:42)

    Whether they volunteered or were drafted, 1 out of 10 soldiers did not survive Vietnam.

    Video Clip (1:42)
  • The Peloponnesian War
    The Peloponnesian War

    Video Clip (2:22)

    Athens' military campaign against the Peloponnesian League that eventually ended the Greek Golden Age, as told by musician and artist Jeffrey Lewis.

    Video Clip (2:22)
  • Cold War
    Cold War

    Video Clip (2:31)

    The Cold War is over, but what it left behind may surprise you.

    Video Clip (2:31)
  • D-Day Invasion
    D-Day Invasion

    Video Clip (3:07)

    On June 6, 1944, Allied troops landed on the beaches of Normandy and turned the tides of World War II.

    Video Clip (3:07)
  • Deconstructing History: Samurai
    Deconstructing History: Samurai

    Video Clip (2:35)

    The Samurai were fearsome warriors whose traditions of honor and discipline live on in the study of jujitsu and kendo today.

    Video Clip (2:35)
  • Grant or Lee?
    Grant or Lee?

    Video Clip (2:19)

    Which of the admired Civil War generals would you want to lead your country?

    Video Clip (2:19)
  • WWII Spy Strategy
    WWII Spy Strategy

    Video Clip (2:37)

    The Allies use double agents, code breakers and spies to undermine the German military throughout WWII, but cracking the Enigma code proves to be their greatest breakthrough.

    Video Clip (2:37)
  • Sitting Bull
    Sitting Bull

    Video Clip (2:54)

    The tragic, yet true tale of Sitting Bull, the leader of the Hunkpapa Lakota Sioux tribe who led his people's resistance against the United States, sung by musician and artist Jeffrey Lewis.

    Video Clip (2:54)
  • Flying in the South Pacific
    Flying in the South Pacific

    Video Clip (3:31)

    Fred Linden's father was a PBY naval aviator during World War II and left behind two reels of film documenting his service in the South Pacific.

    Video Clip (3:31)
  • World War II Medic
    World War II Medic

    Video Clip (2:37)

    Michael Curry's grandfather was a medic during World War II and left behind meticulous notes to guide Michael through the films of his war experience.

    Video Clip (2:37)
  • Douglas MacArthur
    Douglas MacArthur

    Video Clip (3:27)

    The general gains fame in World War II, then infamy when he is removed from his command in the Korean War.

    Video Clip (3:27)
  • MacArthur and Me
    MacArthur and Me

    Video Clip (3:44)

    Judy Kent's neighbor, George Dibbs, was a combat photographer follwing General MacArthur during WWII and shared his films with her.

    Video Clip (3:44)
  • Trench Warfare
    Trench Warfare

    Video Clip (1:14)

    Although best known for its role in the long slog of World War I, trench warfare actually got its start on the battlefields of the American Civil War. Find out how new weapons and technology played a part in both its development and destruction.

    Video Clip (1:14)
  • Causes of World War I
    Causes of World War I

    Video Clip (2:17)

    By 1914, military tensions and a series of alliances have Europe on the edge of war. In August, the fuse is lit by an assassination in Sarajevo. By war's end, more than 100 countries would be involved in the conflict.

    Video Clip (2:17)
  • Confederate vs. Union Soldiers
    Confederate vs. Union Soldiers

    Video Clip (2:39)

    Find out what divided the men of the Civil War, and how in many ways they were more alike than different.

    Video Clip (2:39)
  • Civil War Tech
    Civil War Tech

    Video Clip (2:17)

    The Civil War saw the rise of major technological advances in warfare.

    Video Clip (2:17)
  • America Divided
    America Divided

    Video Clip (3:54)

    America is at the brink of a Civil War as cotton spreads west and threatens to expand slavery into new territories.

    Video Clip (3:54)
  • D-Day Deception
    D-Day Deception

    Video Clip (3:24)

    During WWII, a shrewd deception dubbed "Operation Fortitude" convinces the German military command that Allied forces will land at Pas de Calais rather than Normandy.

    Video Clip (3:24)
  • Coroner's Report: Atomic Bomb
    Coroner's Report: Atomic Bomb

    Video Clip (2:17)

    In August 1945, the United States dropped two atomic bombs over the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. What happened to people on the fringes of the blasts?

    Video Clip (2:17)
  • Coroner's Report: Guillotine
    Coroner's Report: Guillotine

    Video Clip (3:14)

    The guillotine, the notorious killing machine of the French Revolution, was used to behead thousands, including King Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette. Why was it a humane form of execution for its time, and did victims' brains continue functioning after decapitation?

    Video Clip (3:14)
  • Coroner's Report: Julius Caesar
    Coroner's Report: Julius Caesar

    Video Clip (2:01)

    The Roman leader Julius Caesar was stabbed 23 times by a mob of mutinous senators in 44 B.C. Could he possibly have survived long enough to utter his famous last words?

    Video Clip (2:01)
  • Coroner's Report: Stonewall Jackson
    Coroner's Report: Stonewall Jackson

    Video Clip (2:35)

    The Confederate general Stonewall Jackson was accidentally shot by his own men during a major Civil War battle, but it wasn't his wounds that killed him eight days later. How exactly did the commander die?

    Video Clip (2:35)
  • Coroner's Report: Seppuku
    Coroner's Report: Seppuku

    Video Clip (2:26)

    Seppuku was a ritual form of suicide used by samurai warriors to avoid surrender or atone for a shameful act. What were their painful final moments really like?

    Video Clip (2:26)
  • Deconstructing History: Spartans
    Deconstructing History: Spartans

    Video Clip (2:06)

    Ten-thousand strong, the Spartan army was highly skilled and technologically advanced for its time.

    Video Clip (2:06)
  • Andrew Jackson Defends New Orleans in War of 1812
    Andrew Jackson Defends New Orleans in War of 1812

    Video Clip (3:41)

    Video Clip (3:41)
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
    Cuban Missile Crisis

    Video Clip (2:22)

    Get the story of the dramatic face-off that nearly ended in nuclear war, as told by musician and artist Jeffrey Lewis.

    Video Clip (2:22)
  • D-Day Invasion of Normandy
    D-Day Invasion of Normandy

    Video Clip (3:19)

    On June 6, 1944, Allied troops invade German-occupied France and face near certain death on the beaches of Normandy.

    Video Clip (3:19)
  • Samurai
    Samurai

    Video Clip (1:34)

    Honor was so much a part of Samurai life that warriors would commit ritual suicide if ever the code was broken.

    Video Clip (1:34)
  • The Mayans
    The Mayans

    Video Clip (1:36)

    The growth of the great Mayan civilization is as much a mystery as its disappearance.

    Video Clip (1:36)
  • The Aztecs
    The Aztecs

    Video Clip (1:20)

    Though they could build complex suspension bridges, the Aztecs could not ward off diseases brought over by the Spanish.

    Video Clip (1:20)
  • The Fall of Rome
    The Fall of Rome

    Video Clip (3:12)

    Musician and artist Jeffrey Lewis sings about the factors that brought down an empire.

    Video Clip (3:12)
  • Hitler's Military Blunders
    Hitler's Military Blunders

    Video Clip (3:27)

    During WWII, Hitler's decentralized and paranoid military command structure spells disaster on the battlefield.

    Video Clip (3:27)
  • Vietnam in HD Classroom Preview
    Vietnam in HD Classroom Preview

    Video Clip (5:26)

    Watch a short preview of Vietnam in HD, a gripping portrait of the war told through the stories of those who experienced it firsthand

    Video Clip (5:26)
  • Mankind in 2 Minutes
    Mankind in 2 Minutes

    Video Clip (2:12)

    Experience the story of Mankind in 2 Minutes.

    Video Clip (2:12)
  • Mankind Decoded Sneak Peek
    Mankind Decoded Sneak Peek

    Video Clip (5:03)

    Check out a sneak peek of the upcoming series Mankind Decoded.

    Video Clip (5:03)
  • D-Day Documented by Newsreel Cameras
    D-Day Documented by Newsreel Cameras

    Video Clip (8:56)

    Footage of the historic D-Day invasion from the United News. The best known D-Day is June 6, 1944 the day on which the Invasion of Normandy began. This video clip is courtesy of The History Channel.

    Video Clip (8:56)
  • Eisenhower Leads America
    Eisenhower Leads America

    Video Clip (3:21)

    This five-star general and 34th U.S. president launched the Space Race and created the federal interstate highway system.

    Video Clip (3:21)
  • Top Shot: The Long Shot
    Top Shot: The Long Shot

    Video Clip (44:12)

    Sixteen skilled shooters arrive from around the country to live together, put their marksmanship skills to the test, and compete for the $100,000 prize and title of Top Shot.

    Video Clip (44:12)
  • Browning 50-Caliber Machine Gun
    Browning 50-Caliber Machine Gun

    Video Clip (1:42)

    Discover how the Browning 50-caliber machine gun changed the face of U.S. combat, from its inception during World War II to its continued role in obliterating large targets.

    Video Clip (1:42)
  • Submarine Shooter
    Submarine Shooter

    Video Clip (3:20)

    Tom Southwick's father caught amazing moments of life on a submarine on film as a naval photographer during World War II.

    Video Clip (3:20)

Photo Galleries (11)

  • Roman Leaders and Emperors
    Roman Leaders and Emperors

    12 Photos

    Examine some of Ancient Rome's most influential leaders and emperors, and discover how they affected this great empire.

    (12 Photos)
  • American Revolution: Events and Battles
    American Revolution: Events and Battles

    12 Photos

    Explore Revolutionary battle sites such as Lexington, Concord and Yorktown, and learn how the events that took place there shaped the course of the war.

    (12 Photos)
  • French Revolution
    French Revolution

    9 Photos

    The French Revolution

    (9 Photos)
  • Civil War: Gettysburg
    Civil War: Gettysburg

    12 Photos

    Explore the historic Civil War battle of Gettysburg through photographs of the battlefield, the soldiers, and the memorials.

    (12 Photos)
  • Civil War: Artifacts
    Civil War: Artifacts

    9 Photos

    Explore Civil War artifacts, from medical kits and personal hygiene items, to carbines and currency.

    (9 Photos)
  • Civil War: Confederate Leaders
    Civil War: Confederate Leaders

    13 Photos

    View images of Confederate leaders from the Civil War, like Robert E Lee and Stonewall Jackson, and learn more about the roles they played protecting the southern states.

    (13 Photos)
  • World War I: Trench Warfare
    World War I: Trench Warfare

    11 Photos

    Trench warfare reached its highest development on the Western Front during World War I (1914–18), when armies of millions of men faced each other in a line of trenches extending from the Belgian coast through northeastern France to Switzerland.

    (11 Photos)
  • World War II Damage and Destruction
    World War II Damage and Destruction

    7 Photos

    View photos of the damage and destruction from World War II.

    (7 Photos)
  • Korean War
    Korean War

    15 Photos

    On June 25, 1950, the Korean War began when communist North Korea invaded South Korea. The United States, fighting under United Nations command, would lose more than 36,000 soldiers in one of the first clashes of the Cold War.

    (15 Photos)
  • Vietnam War
    Vietnam War

    14 Photos

    The Vietnam War lasted longer than any other war in U.S. history and cost 58,000 American lives

    (14 Photos)
  • Vietnam War: Leaders
    Vietnam War: Leaders

    15 Photos

    View images of the Presidents, politicians, and military leaders who influenced American involvement in the Vietnam War.

    (15 Photos)

Speeches & Audio (26)

  • Mussolini Declares War
    Mussolini Declares War

    Audio Clip (1:48)

    On June 10, 1940, in a rousing speech to his country, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini declares war on France and England.

    Audio Clip (1:48)
  • Chamberlain Declares War on Germany
    Chamberlain Declares War on Germany

    Audio Clip (2:58)

    On September 3, 1939, in a radio broadcast to his nation, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain announces that Germany's refusal to withdraw its troops from Poland after its September 1 invasion has pushed Great Britain to war.

    Audio Clip (2:58)
  • Cold War Arms Race
    Cold War Arms Race

    Audio Clip (2:24)

    On March 21, 1960, U.S. Vice Admiral Hyman Rickover discusses the importance of keeping abreast of Soviet technological developments.

    Audio Clip (2:24)
  • FDR Asks Congress to Declare War on Japan
    FDR Asks Congress to Declare War on Japan

    Audio Clip (7:47)

    On the day after the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt tells a joint session of Congress that the United States must take up arms in response.

    Audio Clip (7:47)
  • FDR War Report to Congress
    FDR War Report to Congress

    Audio Clip (1:58)

    See this moving video of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's speech to Congress describing the United State's circumstance and the Nazi's eventual downfall.

    Audio Clip (1:58)
  • George H. W. Bush Announces Start of Persian Gulf War
    George H. W. Bush Announces Start of Persian Gulf War

    Audio Clip (6:33)

    On the evening of January 16,1991, President George H. W. Bush addresses the nation to discuss the launch of Operation Desert Storm.

    Audio Clip (6:33)
  • Israel Fights Arab Nations in Yom Kippur War
    Israel Fights Arab Nations in Yom Kippur War

    Audio Clip (1:44)

    Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban speaks to the media about the origins of the Yom Kippur War.

    Audio Clip (1:44)
  • Nixon on the Vietnam War
    Nixon on the Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (1:06)

    While campaigning for reelection in 1972, President Richard M. Nixon promises to end the war in Vietnam in such a way as to ensure a "a full generation of peace."

    Audio Clip (1:06)
  • Report on D-Day Invasion
    Report on D-Day Invasion

    Audio Clip (4:23)

    Los Angeles Times war correspondent Tom Treanor recounts his firsthand experience landing on the beach at Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944.

    Audio Clip (4:23)
  • Report on the Battle of Okinawa
    Report on the Battle of Okinawa

    Audio Clip (1:50)

    On April 1, 1945, the U.S. 10th Army under Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner began the invasion of Okinawa, a Japanese-held island in the Pacific considered the final stepping stone in an advance toward the Japanese mainland. Two days into the invasion, a news report relays the story of the U.S. Army's fast-paced advance.

    Audio Clip (1:50)
  • War Report on U.S. Invasion of Grenada
    War Report on U.S. Invasion of Grenada

    Audio Clip (1:41)

    A broadcast from Barbados reports on the events surrounding the U.S. invasion of Grenada on October 25, 1983, and the impending evacuation of American civilians from the island.

    Audio Clip (1:41)
  • Westmoreland on the Vietnam War
    Westmoreland on the Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (2:01)

    On April 28, 1967, Gen. William Westmoreland, commander of U.S. operations in Vietnam, describes to a joint session of Congress the challenges of fighting a relentless enemy.

    Audio Clip (2:01)
  • Meeting of U.S. and Soviet Forces on the Elbe River
    Meeting of U.S. and Soviet Forces on the Elbe River

    Audio Clip (2:17)

    NBC News war coverage details the Allied success at the Elbe. On April 25, 1945, American and Russian troops converged at the Elbe River in Germany. By joining forces, the American and Soviet troops dealt a damaging blow to the Germans by cutting their army in two.

    Audio Clip (2:17)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt Delivers D-Day Prayer
    Franklin D. Roosevelt Delivers D-Day Prayer

    Audio Clip (3:37)

    In a national radio broadcast on June 6, 1944, as 160,000 Allied troops land in Normandy in an attempt to liberate France, President Franklin D. Roosevelt asks America to join him in a prayer.

    Audio Clip (3:37)
  • Clark Gable reports on the WWII air war
    Clark Gable reports on the WWII air war

    Audio Clip (1:35)

    Clark Gable served in the U.S. Army Air Corps by dividing his time between military documentaries and combat. Gable participated in bombing raids over Nazi Germany, rose to the rank of major, and received the Air Medal and Distinguished Flying Cross.

    Audio Clip (1:35)
  • German V-2 Attacks on Britain
    German V-2 Attacks on Britain

    Audio Clip (0:33)

    On September 8, 1944, Germany launched an aerial attack on London with V-2 ballistic missiles. A U.S. broadcast describes the varying reports coming from Germany and England of the damage. The V-2, developed by German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, was more technologically advanced than any other rocket of the era.

    Audio Clip (0:33)
  • Allied Advances Against Germany
    Allied Advances Against Germany

    Audio Clip (2:18)

    By March 26, 1945, the main body of U.S. and British forces in Europe had crossed the Rhine, their last major obstacle in the conquest of Germany. Advancing as much as 50 miles a day, the U.S. First and Ninth armies encircled the Ruhr.

    Audio Clip (2:18)
  • U.S. Goals in World War II
    U.S. Goals in World War II

    Audio Clip (0:31)

    In his speech delivered July 23, 1942, Secretary of State Cordell Hull explains the aims of the United States in World War II.

    Audio Clip (0:31)
  • John F. Kennedy on Coup in South Vietnam
    John F. Kennedy on Coup in South Vietnam

    Audio Clip (6:06)

    On October 29, 1963, President John F. Kennedy meets with the National Security Council to discuss whether to support the overthrow of South Vietnam's President Ngo Dinh Diem. During the secretly recorded conversation, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and the president craft a detailed plan involving Henry Cabot Lodge, ambassador to South Vietnam, Gen. Paul D. Harkins and the general of the South Vietnamese military, hoping to avoid setting off a civil war in the country.

    Audio Clip (6:06)
  • Douglas MacArthur Receives the Japanese Surrender
    Douglas MacArthur Receives the Japanese Surrender

    Audio Clip (1:21)

    On September 2, 1945, aboard the U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay, World War II comes to a close when Japanese officials sign the unconditional surrender. Gen. Douglas MacArthur presides over the signing and delivers a short speech on the momentous occasion.

    Audio Clip (1:21)
  • War Report on B-29 Use
    War Report on B-29 Use

    Audio Clip (2:36)

    Brig. Gen. H.S. Hansell delivers a report in June 1944 on American B-29 bomber strikes against Germany and Japan.

    Audio Clip (2:36)
  • Schwarzkopf on Liberation of Kuwait
    Schwarzkopf on Liberation of Kuwait

    Audio Clip (0:58)

    Once President George H.W. Bush declares that "Kuwait is liberated" and Iraq's army defeated, Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf holds a press conference on February 27, 1991, and expresses his admiration for the U.S. troops.

    Audio Clip (0:58)
  • Korean War Progress Report
    Korean War Progress Report

    Audio Clip (3:57)

    Upon his return from the Far East, Supreme Commander of U.N. forces Gen. Matthew Ridgeway addresses a joint session of Congress on April 22, 1952, and recounts stories of Allied bravery on the battlefield.

    Audio Clip (3:57)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt on American Progress in World War II
    Franklin D. Roosevelt on American Progress in World War II

    Audio Clip (1:00)

    With the United States now entered into World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt uses the occasion of Washington’s birthday to broadcast to the nation on February 23, 1942, an outline of America’s progress in the war.

    Audio Clip (1:00)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1941 Labor Day Speech
    Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1941 Labor Day Speech

    Audio Clip (1:37)

    In his Labor Day radio broadcast in 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt reminds his fellow citizens of the need to devote America’s industrial effort to building weaponry in order to "crush Hitler and his Nazi forces."

    Audio Clip (1:37)
  • North Vietnam Disregards Ceasefire Agreement
    North Vietnam Disregards Ceasefire Agreement

    Audio Clip (4:44)

    In an October 12, 1973, interview, Col. Le Gran, U.S. deputy director of intelligence, discusses the discovery that North Vietnam installed SA-2 missiles in the southern city of Khe Sanh shortly after a ceasefire agreement prohibiting military incursion in South Vietnam was signed on January 27 of that year.

    Audio Clip (4:44)
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