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Brigadier Gerard is the hero of a series of 17 historical short stories, a play, and a major character in a novel by the British writer Arthur Conan Doyle. Brigadier Etienne Gerard is a Hussar officer in the French Army during the Napoleonic Wars. Gerard's most notable attribute is his vanity – he is utterly convinced that he is the bravest ...
Brig. Gen. Wadsworth (seated, far right) and his staff Scene of General Wadsworth's death. Tree in foreground was shattered by shell that killed his horse. At the start of Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's 1864 Overland Campaign, Wadsworth led his division in Maj. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren's V Corps at the Battle of the Wilderness.
The 353rd Civil Affairs Command is based at Ft. Wadsworth, Staten Island, New York. Prior to that, it was headquartered in the Bronx, NY. ... Brigadier General Dean P ...
Peleg Wadsworth Jonathan Warner [ 62 ] Colonel Jonathan Warner's Regiment of Minute Men, commanded by Captain Jonathan Barns, marched from Brookfield, Massachusetts on April 19, 1775 upon news of the British advance on Lexington and Concord.
General Wadsworth may refer to: James Wadsworth (lawyer) (1730–1816), Connecticut Militia brigadier general in the American Revolutionary War James S. Wadsworth (1807–1864), Union Army brevet major general
Brigadier Alleyne John Addy (1917—1994), Royal Pioneer Corps [5] General James Whorwood Adeane (1740—1802) Brigadier-General Rodolph Ladeveze Adlercron [3] (1873—1966), GOC Infantry Brigade and Calais Base; Major-General Sir John Adye (1857–1930) Brigadier John Frederick Adye [2] (1900—1977), Royal Artillery, 4th Indian Infantry Division
Brigadier Gerard finished officially 10 lengths ahead of the third horse, Gold Rod, which indicated that he had run up to his best form, however examination of the race film replay showed, and the Brigadier's owner, John Hislop, later acknowledged, that the distance between the second and third was in fact 17 lengths, indicating that Brigadier ...
Brigadier Gerard (5 March 1968 – 29 October 1989) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. In a racing career which lasted from June 1970 until October 1972, he won seventeen of his eighteen races.