CATEGORIES
6 THINGS YOU (PROBABLY) DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT THE CROWN JEWELS
With a coronation on the horizon, we reveal some lesser-known facts about the nation’s most precious treasures
HOSPITAL TRAINS
These long military medical trains were first developed in the 1850s and reached the zenith of their effectiveness during World War I
EYES ON THE SAND THE LONG RANGE DESERT GROUP AT EL ALAMEIN
Watching and reporting enemy movements, the LRDG served as Monty's eyes and ears in the build up to the decisive battle
THE HITLER WHO FOUGHT FOR THE ALLIES
The estranged half-nephew of the Nazi leader, William Patrick Hitler led his own wartime crusade against his half-uncle across the ocean. William's story is one of family drama, FBI investigations and eventually the taking up of arms against the Axis
FIRST MILITARY RAILWAYS
Some of the earliest railway networks became critical to conflicts around the world, transporting men and materiel
WWI ON RAILS
The outbreak of the Great War saw the rapid development of armoured trains - formidable weapons that played a pivotal role in the conflict
AN END TO THE BEGINNING - THE SECOND BATTLE OF EL ALAMEIN (23 OCTOBER - 11 NOVEMBER 1942)
Eighty years ago, the Allied 8th Army launched a decisive offensive against the Axis forces in North Africa. It saw the tipping point of a long struggle for dominance over the region and precipitated the Axis collapse in the Mediterranean
Howard Hughes: the troubled tycoon
Every venture the American business magnate undertook was big from his blockbuster movies to the planes he constructed. But how did Hughes go from rubbing shoulders with the stars to living a life of seclusion?
The Great Smog
On 5 December 1952, as Londoners rushed around the city after the start of the festive season, fingers of fog began to unfurl between chimneys. But as night rolled in, the fog thickened, and soon a blanket of smog was choking the capital. Londoners stumbled around the streets, unable to see further than a few metres in front of them.
CHASING THE AMERICAN DREAM
Being a prospector during the California gold rush was by no means plain sailing, but non-white arrivals had it especially tough
THE PRICE OF GOLD
Dr Stephen Tuffnell shines a light on the staggering cost that intensive mining practices inflicted upon the natural world
What is the importance of the Phaistos Disc?
SHORT ANSWER The ancient treasure may be the key to unlocking an unreadable script, if it can ever be deciphered
The Queen's Jesters
Robert Ross runs his rule over the favourite comedians of Her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
AUNT ESTHER GOES TO WAR
Stephen Bourne remembers his beloved aunt who told him about her life in wartime London as she survived the blitz
THE ORIGINAL BHOY
Celtic are one of Britain’s biggest football clubs but, as Mark Hornsey reveals, they were founded by a humble religious brother as part of his efforts to raise money to help the poor and disadvantaged of Glasgow’s East End
Well Worth a Pepys
Simon Stabler discovers a vintage inn that really did improve with age
England’s Forgotten Football Great
Yorkshireman George Raynor led Sweden to the final of the 1958 World Cup. Margaret Brecknell remembers a managerial pioneer whose achievements are little recognised in his homeland
THE BIG CHANNEL 4-O
Neil Anthony was in at the start of the UK’s first new television channel for 18 years and recalls the heady and hectic times of producing new programmes
SOFA SURFER
Chris Hallam pays tribute to former BBC Breakfast presenter Bill Turnbull whose long career enabled him to build up an easy intimacy with his audience
CARTER, CARNARVON AND A KING
Glenys Adams puts together the pieces of a historical drama and murder mystery set in Ancient Egypt which continues to fascinate over hundreds of years
The Queen's Champion
Simon Stabler speaks to writer and actor Sanjeev Bhaskar, the star of The Kumars at No 42, Queen Elizabeth II's favourite television programme
POSTCARD FROM SOUTH YORKSHIRE
Bob Barton visits a man-made island in the cradle of the steel city, enjoys a pub crawl with a rock legends theme and spends a day on the buses
6 DUNKIRK THINGS YOU (PROBABLY) DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT
Military historian James Holland shares some lesser-known facts about the evacuation at Dunkirk, and the fighting that led up to it...
How J Edgar Hoover secretly ruled America
The long-serving director of the FBI sat at the centre of a web of surveillance and information gathering for nearly five decades. But how did he come to wield so much power? And why were his agents so feared?
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT POMPEII
Dr Sophie Hay answers key questions about the doomed Roman city and the ongoing efforts to understand the lives of its residents
TRENTON
The battered Americans hatch a bold plan to turn the tide of the War of Independence
ROME'S GRAND STRATEGY
"THE ROMANS DID DO SERIOUS STRATEGIC THINKING, THEY DID EXECUTE A SERIOUS LONG-TERM STRATEGY. AND THEY MAINTAINED IT FOR 500 YEARS"
WOMEN & WAR
A new exhibition at Biggin Hill Memorial Museum commemorates women's contribution to the RAF and the defence of the United Kingdom during the darkest hours of World War II
DÜNKIRCHEN 1940: THE GERMAN VIEW OF DUNKIRK
FOR THE BRITISH, DUNKIRK WAS ONE OF THE DEFINING BATTLES OF WWII, THE ARMADA OF 'LITTLE BOATS' SYMBOLISING COURAGE AND DEFIANCE AS THEY RESCUED THE BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE. BUT HOW DID THE GERMANS VIEW IT?
KUTUZOV: A LIFE IN WAR AND PEACE
FACT-CHECKING THE HERO STATUS OF FIELD MARSHAL KUTUZOV, WHO FOR HALF A CENTURY SERVED IN ALMOST EVERY MAJOR CONFLICT IN WHICH RUSSIA TOOK PART