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I would suggest that the turning point was at the Battle of Midway, when America destroyed much of the Japanese naval power.
It wasn't. But the Battle of Saratoga was. You spelled it wrong, stupid.
Gettysburg ended Lee's reputation for invincibility and swung the initiative permanently to the Union, in the East.
No
The German advance on Paris was stopped in September 1914 on the River Marne. By then the plan worked on painstakingly by the German General Staff was in tatters. Soon both sides extended their lines from Switzerland to the sea, and began about four years of trench warfare. On the Western Front the fighting turned into a war of attrition.The Marne RiverMarne river."The Marne River was the site of two battles during the First World War. The first battle was a turning point of World War I, fought in 1914. The second battle was fought four years later, in 1918."
The Battle of Gettysburg
The turning point of the battle of Shiloh was when the confederacy was pushed back.
Battle of Quebec
I would suggest that the turning point was at the Battle of Midway, when America destroyed much of the Japanese naval power.
The Battle of Midway .
It began as German offensive but ended with a successful allied counter attack which saw the Germany army pushed back
It began as German offensive but ended with a successful allied counter attack which saw the Germany army pushed back
It began as German offensive but ended with a successful allied counter attack which saw the Germany army pushed back
It began as German offensive but ended with a successful allied counter attack which saw the Germany army pushed back
It wasn't. But the Battle of Saratoga was. You spelled it wrong, stupid.
The TET offensive of 1968.
The North kept losing to the South: Fort Sumter; The First and Second Battles of Bull Run (Manassas); and a bunch of minute battles as well!