Episodes

  • Beyond the Call: Staff Sergeant John C. Sjogren at San Jose Hacienda, 1945
    Jun 1 2026

    Beyond the Call: Staff Sergeant John C. Sjogren at San Jose Hacienda, 1945 follows an American infantry squad leader on a fortified ridge in the Philippines during World War II, tracing his solo assault on pillboxes, the rescue of a wounded sergeant across open ground, and the destruction of enemy positions that opened the way for his company. The episode sets his actions within the wider Negros campaign and his journey from small-town Michigan to the Pacific, then reflects on what his story reveals about small-unit leadership, responsibility, and quiet courage beyond the Medal of Honor. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.

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    10 mins
  • Arsenal: OV-10 Bronco over Vietnam, 1960s–1970s
    May 29 2026

    Arsenal: OV-10 Bronco over Vietnam, 1960s–1970s follows the twin-boom turboprop into low, circling orbits above jungle firefights, pinned patrols, and tense convoy ambushes during the Vietnam War. The story traces how the Bronco was created to solve the problem of seeing and controlling complex small-unit battles that jets and fragile liaison aircraft could not manage, then walks through its unusual design, cockpit teamwork, and what it was like for pilots, observers, and ground troops who relied on it. Listeners hear how the Bronco fought, what it did well and where it was vulnerable, and how its ideas lived on long after Vietnam. Arsenal is the Friday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads dot com.

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    15 mins
  • Broken Arrows and Hot Landing Zones: How Ia Drang Foreshadowed the Long War in Vietnam
    May 27 2026

    Headline Wednesday: Ia Drang, Vietnam War drops you into a helicopter door over a tiny clearing called Landing Zone X-Ray as an unseen enemy closes in. This episode walks through the first major clash between U.S. air cavalry and North Vietnamese regulars in the Central Highlands, where rotors, radios, and anthills had to stand in for trenches and strongpoints. You will hear how airmobile tactics, close-range fighting, and “broken arrow” calls turned an abstract concept into a grim test of survival. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

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    16 mins
  • This Week in History May 26th, 2026 – June 1st, 2026
    May 26 2026

    This Week in U.S. Military History: May 26th, 2026–June 1st, 2026 follows American forces from George Washington’s strike at Jumonville Glen through the hard fighting on Okinawa, tracing how a young colonial tradition grew into a global military power. Listeners hear how early clashes on the frontier and along the Niagara frontier, the brutal learning curve of the Civil War, and the first American offensives at Cantigny and Château-Thierry shaped battlefield confidence and command. Alongside these battles, the story pauses on quieter but decisive moments like the first national Decoration Day and the “unlimited national emergency” that pushed the country toward total mobilization.

    Across the week’s dates, the narrative keeps returning to a few common threads: how leaders respond to crisis, how ordinary troops endure harsh conditions from the Aleutians to Okinawa, and how a nation chooses to remember its dead. Each segment situates the day’s event in its wider war, then follows its long shadow forward into later doctrine, memory, and service culture. “This Week in U.S. Military History” is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads dot com, offering listeners a grounded, story-driven walk through the calendar of American arms.

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    13 mins
  • Beyond the Call: Captain Francis B. Wai at Red Beach, Leyte, 1944
    May 25 2026

    Beyond the Call: Captain Francis B. Wai at Red Beach, Leyte, 1944 follows a Chinese Hawaiian officer leading pinned-down soldiers off a deadly shoreline and into the flooded paddies of the Leyte landings in World War Two, where his decision to stand, move, and draw fire turns a stalled assault into a hard-won foothold. Listeners hear a clear narrative of the action, the larger campaign to liberate the Philippines, and a reflective look at leadership, courage, and recognition. Beyond the Call is the Monday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the podcast is developed by Trackpads.com.

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    11 mins
  • Cambrai: The First Great Tank Offensive
    May 20 2026

    Cambrai: The First Great Tank Offensive explores the battle that helped reveal the future of mechanized warfare. Fought in November 1917, Cambrai was not a simple story of tanks breaking trenches and winning the day. It was a battlefield experiment in surprise, coordination, artillery, infantry, engineers, aircraft, cavalry, and the first large-scale effective use of British Mark IV tanks against the Hindenburg Line.

    This episode looks at why Cambrai was chosen, how the British plan worked, where it began to fail, and why the German counterattack turned early success into a harder lesson. More than a century later, Cambrai still matters because it showed both the promise of armored warfare and the truth that no machine wins a battle alone. It was the moment the future of war began to grind forward on tracks.

    Produced by Trackpads.com.

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    13 mins
  • This Week in History May 19th, 2026 – May 25th, 2026
    May 19 2026

    This Week in U.S. Military History: May 19th, 2026–May 25th, 2026 follows a chain of anniversaries from the first spring of the Civil War to the grueling slopes of Vietnam. You hear how the death of Colonel Elmer Ellsworth in Alexandria, the hard driven blows at Front Royal and Winchester, and the failed assaults on Vicksburg’s bluffs shaped national strategy. Along the way, the narrative traces Grant and Lee testing each other at North Anna, sailors trapped aboard USS Squalus off New England, and airborne infantry climbing “Hamburger Hill” in the A Shau Valley.

    The story moves across time but stays anchored in people making hard choices under pressure: officers deciding whether to attack again, divers trusting new rescue technology, and small units fighting for inches of ground in rain and mud. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com, and each scene connects past battlefields, rivers, and coastlines to the service and sacrifice of today’s force.

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    12 mins
  • Holding the Pusan Perimeter: How American and Allied Troops Bought Time With Every Hill
    May 19 2026

    Headline Wednesday: Pusan Perimeter – last-ditch line, Korean War follows the shrinking corner of southern Korea that the United States and its allies refused to abandon. From the dusty ridges west of the port of Pusan to the bends of the Nakdong River, this episode walks through the moment when retreat finally stopped and the line had to hold or the war might be lost. You will hear how exhausted American and South Korean units, joined by British and other United Nations contingents, dug in around the vital harbor that kept the fight alive. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads.com.

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    17 mins