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More than 400 Navajo Code Talkers served in World War II, crafting coded messages the Japanese couldn’t decipher. Only two ...
A new statue at the Utah Veterans Memorial commemorates the significant accomplishments of the Navajo Code Talkers.
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — Thursday was National Navajo Code Talkers Day, and hundreds of people traveled to Window Rock, Arizona ...
Aug. 14 is National Navajo Code Talker Day, honoring the over 400 Code Talkers who served with U.S. Marines in the Pacific ...
Today, the Navajo Nation and beyond celebrate National Navajo Code Talkers Day to honor the legacy of 400 Diné Marines who ...
WWII veteran and Navajo code talker John Kinsel celebrated 106 years of life. National WWII Museum research historian Jason Dawsey talks to Fox News Digital about why code talkers were key during ...
The Navajo Code Talkers participated in all assaults the U.S. Marines led in the Pacific from 1942 to 1945, including Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Peleliu and Iwo Jima.
This year, former tribal chairman and Navajo Code Talker Peter MacDonald attended, but the other two surviving Code Talkers, Thomas Begay and John Kinsel Sr., did not make the event.
The original Navajo Code Talkers were 29 Navajo men who joined the U.S. Marines in 1942 and developed a code that was used across the Pacific during World War II. After the initial recruitment of ...
Begaye was 97. Begaye served as a Navajo Code Talker in the Marine Corps from 1943 to 1945 and fought in the Battle of Tarawa and the Battle of Tinian, the Great Navajo Nation noted in a statement.
The only flaw of "Code Talker" is the jarring overuse of footnotes. In what seems like an attempt to validate even the most mundane facts, including the years that Pabst Blue Ribbon and Budweiser ...