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Dispatch Magazine: This Week in History

Dispatch Magazine: This Week in History

This Week in History is a podcast dedicated to American military history, exploring the battles, leaders, decisions, and defining moments that took place during the same week in years past.

Dr Jason Edwards

4 episodesENserial

Show overview

Dispatch Magazine: This Week in History has published 4 episodes during 2026. Releases follow a near-daily cadence.

Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 13 min and 15 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language History show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 2 months ago, with 4 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Dr Jason Edwards.

Episodes
4
Started
2026
Median length
14 min
Cadence
Near-daily

From the publisher

This Week in History is a podcast dedicated to American military history, exploring the battles, leaders, decisions, and defining moments that took place during the same week in years past. Each episode revisits a specific point on the calendar to examine how military events helped shape the United States, its armed forces, and the broader course of history. From the Revolution and the Civil War to the world wars, Korea, Vietnam, the Global War on Terror, and beyond, the podcast brings listeners back to the events that tested courage, demanded leadership, and changed the nation. The focus stays firmly on the American military experience, highlighting not only major campaigns and famous figures, but also lesser-known actions, forgotten turning points, and the service members whose stories deserve to be remembered. Produced as part of the Trackpads.com network, This Week in History is designed for listeners who want thoughtful, accessible, and engaging history grounded in service, sacrifice, and strategy. The show goes beyond simple dates and battlefield summaries to place each event in context, helping listeners understand why it mattered then and why it still matters now. Whether the episode covers a legendary commander, a hard-fought operation, a Medal of Honor action, or a pivotal decision made far from the front lines, the goal is to connect the past to the enduring legacy of American military service. For anyone interested in the people, principles, and events that shaped the U.S. military across generations, This Week in History offers a focused and meaningful way to explore that history through the lens of the calendar.

Latest Episodes

Ep 13This Week in History March 31st, 2026 – April 6th, 2026

Mar 31, 202613 min

Ep 12This Week in History March 24th, 2026 – March 30th, 2026

This Week in U.S. Military History: March 24th, 2026–March 30th, 2026 follows a seven-day arc that runs from colonial anger over the Quartering Act and the birth of a permanent frigate navy through the siege of Veracruz, last-ditch Confederate attacks at Fort Stedman, and the hard-won declaration that Iwo Jima was finally secure. Listeners hear how a lost experimental submarine near Hawaii drove safer undersea design, how a small surface action at the Komandorski Islands cut off remote Japanese garrisons, and how the Easter Offensive and the final withdrawal of combat troops reshaped American memory of Vietnam before aircrews head into the skies over Kosovo in Operation Allied Force.The narration moves across centuries in present-tense detail, showing how decisions about housing soldiers, buying Alaska, honoring Andrews’ Raiders with the first Medals of Honor, and relying on coalition airpower all shaped the evolving character of American arms. Along the way, the episode threads together leadership, adaptation, and sacrifice across cold ridges, volcanic rock, and crowded flight decks, inviting listeners to connect past campaigns with the burdens still carried by veterans and families today. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Mar 30, 202616 min

Ep 11This Week in History March 17th, 2026 – March 23rd, 2026

This Week in U.S. Military History: March 17th, 2026–March 23rd, 2026 brings together moments when words, weapons, and technology steered the United States armed forces onto new paths. Listeners move from Patrick Henry’s fiery “liberty or death” plea and the British evacuation of Boston, through the desperate stand at Bentonville, MacArthur’s “I shall return” vow, and the inferno aboard the carrier Franklin off Japan. Along the way, the crossing of the Rhine at Oppenheim and the airborne drop of Operation Tomahawk show how ground and air forces reshaped campaigns at the war’s sharpest edge.The story then widens into orbit and deep into the Cold War and beyond, with the Vanguard 1 satellite, the secret bombing of Cambodia under Operation Menu, an ambitious vision for missile defense, and the opening strikes of the Iraq War. Across these seven days, listeners hear how leadership, risk, and innovation link colonial assemblies, riverbanks, carrier decks, and desert highways. This Week in U.S. Military History is a Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com, offering a weekly walk through the dates that continue to shape American arms and service.

Mar 30, 202613 min

Ep 10This Week in History March 10th, 2026 – March 16th, 2026

This Week in U.S. Military History: March 10th, 2026–March 16th, 2026 follows a week where questions of loyalty, power, and responsibility sit at the heart of the story. Listeners move from George Washington calming angry officers at Newburgh and the founding of the United States Military Academy at West Point to Ulysses Grant taking charge of all Union armies and United Nations forces recapturing Seoul in the Korean War. Along the way, the narrative tracks Pershing’s expedition into Mexico, MacArthur’s escape from Corregidor, and the creation of the Army’s K-9 Corps. The episode also confronts the extremes of modern conflict, from the firebombing of Tokyo and the announcement of the Truman Doctrine to the tragedy of My Lai and its impact on military ethics and public trust. Each stop on the calendar shows how decisions made in cramped meeting rooms, desert columns, bomb bays, and small villages shaped both American strategy and the standards expected of those who serve. This Week in U.S. Military History is the Tuesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.

Mar 30, 202612 min
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