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World History Group is a magazine publishing company headquartered in Leesburg, Virginia. It was founded in 2006 as Weider History Group by Eric Weider, the son of fitness entrepreneur Ben Weider (and nephew of Joe Weider ) and current President of Schiff Nutrition International .
Nana (Kas-tziden) from the Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography, via Google Books; Nana in photograph of the Council between General Crook and Geronimo from the U.S. Library of Congress; Warm Springs Apache Leader Nana: The 80-Year-Old Warrior Turned the Tables at the Weider History Group's historynet.com; Tracking Nana - Nana’s raid
Armchair General was a bimonthly American military history magazine published by Weider History Group. It was in circulation between February 2004 and May 2015. The headquarters of the magazine was in Thousands Oaks, California. [1]
World History Group From a page move : This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed). This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.
Zabecki is editor of the Vietnam Magazine dedicated to the history of the Vietnam War, and a senior historian at the Military History Magazine. Both are published by Weider History Group. He is the author of over 600 articles, some of which appeared at Weider's online property, Historynet.com. [3]
America's Civil War was a full-color history magazine published bi-monthly which covered the American Civil War. It was established in 1987 [1] [2] by editor Roy Morris Jr. It carried articles about the battles, campaigns, leaders, and common soldiers of the Civil War. It contained thought-provoking essays on the way the war is remembered today ...
In 2006, the Weider History Group, a wholly owned subsidiary of Weider Health and Fitness Inc, acquired Civil War Times in an acquisition of eleven history-related magazines from another magazine chain, along with America's Civil War, Armchair General, Vietnam, etc.
Matthew "Mack" Harrison Marsden (c. 1849–1883) was a livestock trader who lived in rural Jefferson County, Missouri.Marsden was suspected of many crimes from 1881 to 1883, including arson, murder and robbery although he was often accused, questioned, and arrested.