Nominator Wizardman noted that Feller, one of the most famous pitchers in baseball history, "was a star from the get-go. He missed the peak of his career due to World War II, then came back and pitched another decade." The article went through Peer and GA reviews before being nominated for FA.
An encore to nominator HJ Mitchell's Operation Barras, this article was the result of a microgrant from Wikimedia UK, who purchased most of the books used for research, and passed GA and A-Class reviews prior to FA.
Nominator SchroCat described McNeile (better known perhaps as 'Sapper') as "one of the forgotten giants of the golden age of British detective fiction". The creator of proto-Bond hero Bulldog Drummond, McNeile saw action in World War I and wrote extensively of his experiences.
Written in advance of the 300th anniversary this July of Gibraltar becoming a British possession, this article covers the 2,900-year history of this famously strategic territory at the mouth of the Mediterranean Sea that one historian has called "one of the most densely fortified and fought-over places in Europe".
Cam took this article to A-Class review two years ago, but its current form is a substantial upgrade from that one. Sturmvogel 66 covered design and construction, and Dank condensed the service histories of the two ships that made up the class, which were sunk during the Battle of Leyte Gulf in World War II.
A little-known heroine of a little-understood war, Laura Secord was described by nominator Curly Turkey as "an important part of early Canadian mythology". The article underwent Peer and GA reviews before achieving Featured status.
Nominator Lemurbaby described the subject of this article as "the most notorious queen in the history of Madagascar", called the "Female Caligula" in one biography. He goes on to say that, when viewed in historical perspective, "her reign can be understood as an effort to extend the realm and preserve Malagasy traditions against encroaching European influence".
Rostislav was a pre-dreadnought battleship of the Imperial Russian Navy. Nominator Sturmvogel 66 put the article through GA and A-Class review before nominating for FA, and acknowledged the assistance of Dank as copyeditor.
This was a lawsuit brought against The Progressive magazine by the United States Department of Energy in 1979 over an article that purported to reveal the "secret" of the hydrogen bomb. Another in nominator Hawkeye7's ever-expanding series of articles related to the atom bomb, this successfully underwent GA and A-Class reviews before achieving FA.
This innovative list describes and provides examples of the different types of camouflage methods used by animals and humans. In his nomination statement Chiswick Chap noted that this list complements the camouflage article by providing images and examples.
New featured pictures
The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries (nominator: Crisco 1492)
Shot Down German Hannover CL.IIIa (nominator: Keraunoscopia)
This article covers the life of a British Army officer best known for leading New Zealand Forces in World War I. In his nomination statement Zawed commented that while Godley was a capable administrator and trainer "he was definitely not one of the great field commanders of WWI".
The latest in this long-running series of lists from MisterBee1966, this article covers all the recipients of this medal whose last name starts with "M".
This article covers the short life of a Serbian Chetnik commander of World War II who collaborated with the German occupation forces and was executed shortly after the end of the war. As part of the nomination statement Peacemaker67 noted that little is known about Lukačević's early life.
Also developed by Peacemaker67, this article describes the organisation and short history of the second Waffen SS division to be raised by German forces from Bosnian Muslims during World War II. This division never reached more than brigade size, and was disbanded after its members mutinied in October 1944.
Inglis was a British civil engineer who developed an innovative bridge design while serving in the British Army during World War I and later became a senior academic at the University of Cambridge. Dumelow is hoping to develop this into the first featured article covering a civil engineer.
This article covers the life and at times controversial career of one of the best-known and most successful American generals of World War II. Ed! is planning on nominating it for featured article status.
Another high quality article on Balkan history, this article describes an engagement fought during August 1995 which was the last major battle of the Croatian War of Independence.
Part of Hawkeye's huge series of high-quality articles on the World War II-era Manhattan Project, this article covers the life of a high-ranking officer involved in the project. When nominating the article Hawkeye commented that he wasn't sure if it made the grade, yet the nomination easily passed.
This article describes the service history of the last of the Imperial German Navy's Deutschland-class battleships. While the ship was obsolete by the time she was commissioned in 1908, she remained in service after World War I and is often credited with firing the first shots of World War II in September 1939.
Also part of Hawkeye's work on the Manhattan Project, this article describes the life of one of two men credited as being the "father of the atomic bomb". In the nomination statement Hawkeye noted that Fermi is among the most famous of all scientists.
About The Bugle
First published in 2006, the Bugle is the monthly newsletter of the English Wikipedia's Military history WikiProject.