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During the mid-1940s, Charles Richard Cammell (author of Aleister Crowley: The Man, The Mage, The Poet) met with Fuller and reported his views about Crowley: "I have heard an eminent personage, General J.F.C. Fuller, a man famous in arms and letters, one who has known the greatest statesmen, warriors, dictators, of our age, declare solemnly ...
Plan 1919 was a military strategy drawn up by British Army officer J. F. C. Fuller in 1918 during World War I. His plan criticised the practice of physically destroying the enemy, and instead called for tanks to rapidly advance into the enemy's rear area to destroy supply bases and lines of communication, which would also be bombed.
Major-General J.F.C. 'Boney' Fuller, the noted military historian and theoretician, served as the Regular Army adjutant of 2nd (South) Middlesex RVC and was instrumental in converting it into the 10th Bn Middlesex Regiment. Fuller later claimed that his post with the 10th Middlesex inspired him to study soldiering seriously.) [73] [74]
J. F. C. Fuller (1878–1966), British Army major general James A. Fuller (1823–1902), British Army general John Augustus Fuller (1828–1902), British Army general
The British Army's principles of war were first published after the First World War and based on the work of the British general and military theorist, J. F. C. Fuller. The definition of each principle has been refined over the following decades and adopted throughout the British armed forces.
Haig presumably intended the story to explain the setback at Flesquières, though Major-General J. F. C. Fuller, who helped plan the attack, was annoyed that Haig had included it. [7] [3] Haig was also criticised for praising the bravery of the lone gunner without also commending that of his tank crews. It was also suggested that Haig's account ...
Volz said IHOPKC’s executive committee, led by Kurt Fuller, a retired major general who took over management of the crisis on Dec. 10, would be temporarily assuming the executive director ...
Colonel J. F. C. Fuller, Chief of Staff of the Tank Corps during the First World War and Chief instructor at the Staff College, Camberley in the 1920s, proposed an all-tank force, which would operate independently against enemy headquarters and lines of communication.