Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/News/April 2020/Project news





From the editors

  

  

Welcome to the fourth Bugle for 2020!

We hope that this issue provides a welcome break from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Our annual edit-a-thon March Madness was once again a great success. Twenty-two editors participated and managed to: tag 2,457 articles as falling under MilHist's remit; add relevant task force tags to 3,310 articles; and assess or check the assessment of 1,796 articles, including 39 Good Article or A class assessments. As part of this, 619 Milhistbot B-class assessments were checked, reducing the backlog at User:Hawkeye7/Sandbox6 by a third. In the usual spirit of friendly competition, awards were handed out for those who finished with the top three scores at the end of the month. PINTofCARLING was awarded the Golden Wiki for an impressive 3,712 points, Gog the Mild was awarded the Silver Wiki, and GELongstreet was awarded the Bronze Wiki. Well done to them, and thanks to everyone who participated! Special thanks go to Gog the Mild who set up the drive, tallied the points and handed out the gongs!

Parsecboy recently passed the milestone of 80 Featured Articles, well done on your sustained efforts creating quality content for Wikipedia! He is placed third amongst members of the project, and sixth across the whole of Wikipedia. In terms of reviewing milestones, Hog Farm, who many will know from their work on American Civil War articles, recently passed 50 GANs. Nice work!

The results of the January to March 2020 Milhist reviewing are in. CPA-5 headed the tally with an impressive 42 reviews, followed by Gog the Mild and AustralianRupert. Four more editors also received the WikiChevrons, and a total of 21 editors contributed towards the 259 reviews completed in the quarter. Thanks to everyone who reviewed, your efforts are greatly appreciated and make a significant contribution to the stream of quality content Milhist produces.

Turning to this issue of The Bugle, the regular article news section highlights the large number of articles promoted to featured status in March. These articles cover a wide range of topics, including a medieval king, a madcap helicopter escapade which ended in gunfire on the grounds of the White House, and the Australian military's struggle to supply a major deployment to a neighbouring country.

The book review section includes two reviews by Hawkeye7 of a book on the logistical effort behind the Crusades and another work on the USAF's nuclear forces during the early stages of the Cold War.

Your editors, Ian Rose (talk) and Nick-D (talk)


Awards and honours


Contest department

 
  • The third month of the 2020 Military History Article Writing Contest attracted eight participants. First place was taken by Parsecboy with a 131 points from 13 articles to take the WikiChevrons, followed by Zawed with 58 points to receive the Writer's Barnstar. Also scoring were Gog the Mild, Djmaschek, Peacemaker67, Catlemur, Robinvp11 and Harrias. Congratulations and thanks to all participants. You can self-assess up to C-class for the contest, but B-class assessments need to be done by another editor. This is best organised by posting at WP:MHAR. Make sure to add your entries for the March contest as soon as they are promoted, this allows the coords to check them progressively.


About The Bugle
First published in 2006, the Bugle is the monthly newsletter of the English Wikipedia's Military history WikiProject.

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+ Add a commentDiscuss this story

Thanks again Ian and Nick! Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 06:30, 13 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]

You have no idea how welcome non-covid-19 news is: its been non stop wall to wall coverage out her for two weeks! I'd given anything to her politics again, that how sick I am of covid 19 coverage. TomStar81 (Talk) 09:09, 13 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]