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William Shepard (December 1, 1737 [O.S. November 20, 1737] [Note 1] – November 16, 1817) was a United States representative from Massachusetts (1797–1802), and a military officer in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War.
William Gunn Shepherd (1878–1933) was an American journalist, fiction writer and war correspondent. Shepherd is best known for his reporting from Europe during the First World War . Shepherd also covered the Mexican Revolution and accompanied Francisco I. Madero on his march to Mexico City in 1911.
The house c. 1870 The Convent of the Good Shepherd Memorial plaque at the house's site in 2020. The Lucas Sullivant House was the house of Lucas Sullivant, founder of Franklinton, Ohio. Franklinton, where the house was located, was Central Ohio's first white settlement, and a predecessor to and current neighborhood of the city of Columbus. [1]
The exterior scenes were shot on location near St. George, Utah, 137 miles (220 km) downwind of the United States government's Nevada Test Site. In 1953, extensive above-ground nuclear weapons testing had occurred at the test site, as part of Operation Upshot–Knothole. Director Dick Powell died of cancer in January 1963.
General Shepherd or General Shephard may refer to: Gordon Strachey Shephard (1885–1918), British Royal Flying Corps brigadier general; Leland C. Shepard Jr. (1923–2009), U.S. Air Force brigadier general; Lemuel C. Shepherd Jr. (1896–1990), U.S. Marine Corps four-star general; William Shepard (1737–1817), Continental Army general
A small cavalry force was available to cover the southern ford, and Pendleton dispatched an artillery battery and a small infantry force to Shepherd's Ford. [9] Preservationist Frances E. Kennedy states that Pendleton had two brigades and 45 cannon available, [ 1 ] while historian Peter S. Carmichael states that he had only 600 men (some of ...
Lucas Sullivant (September 22, 1765 – August 28, 1823), was the founder of Franklinton, Ohio, the first American settlement near the Scioto River in central Ohio. [ 1 ] Biography
The village scenes were shot in Wighton, the shoreline scenes were shot at Holkham Gap, and the airfield scenes were shot at then disused RAF Sculthorpe (which had, for some time prior, been a USAF base), near Fakenham, in Norfolk. [2] The sets were designed by Harry Pottle. The episode was first broadcast ABC on 28 September 1965. [2]