A South Carolina Marine widow who says her husband died from an aggressive cancer years after serving at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina is hoping for vindication.
The Fourth of July is Thursday and there’s one group of people you may want to keep an eye out for if you’re celebrating, veterans. WTOC talked to Fort Stewart’s Winn Army community hospital for ways to help.
Soldiers of the 1782nd Engineer Support Company from the South Carolina National Guard (SCNG) reunited with their families after being gone for nearly a year.
WIS United for Veterans along with the South Carolina Department of Veterans Affairs (SCDVA) and the Columbia Fireflies is inviting the public to Military Appreciation Night at Segra Park.
Thursday hits home for many local veterans and their families. Its the 80th anniversary of D-Day, the air and sea invasion that would mark the beginning of the end of World War II.
Fort Jackson marked the 80th anniversary of D-Day by taking soldiers inside the pivotal World War II battle through artifacts, reenactors, weapons, equipment and iconic images.
With only a couple thousand World War II veterans still alive across the country, one Lowcountry veteran reflects on his life as he’s less than two weeks from turning 100.
You may be familiar with McEntire Joint National Guard Base in Eastover, but you may not know the incredible story of its namesake: Brig. Gen. Barney McEntire.
Third Army Commanding General George S. Patton, Jr. continues to have his memory preserved at Patton Hall at Third Army Headquarters on Shaw Air Force Base.
The USAA Poppy Wall of Honor recognizes the more than 600,000 American service members who gave their lives in service to our nation since World War I.
This Friday, Scouts BSA Troop 425 from Lexington will honor fallen military heroes with a Memorial Day Flag Placement event at Fort Jackson National Cemetery.
South Carolina’s veterans are invited to the Veterans Experience Action Center event at the Bluff Road National Guard Armory in Columbia from March 21-23.
The Veterans Administration is considering a change that could make it easier for veterans exposed to Agent Orange to get benefits, and this hits close to home.
The National Guardsman who passed away Monday afternoon while attending the Institute for Religious Leadership (USA-IRL) at Fort Jackson has been identified.
Thousands of soldiers left last week after spending 10 weeks of basic training at Fort Jackson to head home for the holidays, but not everyone is heading out for Christmas.
The office of Gov. Henry McMaster partnered with the South Carolina National Guard Survivors Outreach Services to commemorate the the state’s fallen service members and their families.
More than three million veterans experienced a mental illness in 2021, according to a national survey on drug use and health, and the data shows nearly half of them didn’t seek treatment.