A suspected wartime artillery item discovered on a Somerset beach has been destroyed in a secure location by the Royal Navy.
The “Dancing Mouse”—the Clemson-class destroyer more formally known as the USS Edsall—and its more-than-200 servicemen went ...
But the United States was not far behind and by January 1943, the US Army had introduced its first successful helicopter (the ...
A World War Two veteran from Devon is celebrating her 100th birthday. Suzanne Sparrow joined the Women's Royal Naval Service ...
The Royal Australian Navy announced this week it has discovered the wreckage of the World War II destroyer USS Edsall in the ...
The Navy destroyer was sunk in 1942 during World War II, after facing down overwhelming odds and fighting a pitched battle.
The bomb was towed five miles from Southend Pier before being detonated Royal Navy bomb disposal experts have destroyed a World War Two device found in the wreck of a 17th Century warship.
Royal Navy officers then took the device far out to sea to dispose of it safely this evening. A van marked 'Royal Navy bomb disposal' and an inflatable boat were spotted on the town's seafront ...
The USS Edsall played a pivotal role in the Allied Pacific campaign in World War II. More than 80 years after sinking in ...