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Old Buck, from a shortening of his last name, used later in life. [66] Old Public Functionary, [67] used by Buchanan in his December 1859 State of the Union address and adopted by newspapers. [66] Ten-Cent Jimmy: derogatory, as a reaction to Buchanan's campaign statement that ten cents a day was decent pay for a worker. [68]
30th Infantry Division – "Old Hickory"; a nickname given by the Germans-"Roosevelt's SS" This is today's 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team. 31st Infantry Division – "Dixie"; 32nd Infantry Division "Red Arrow"; "shot through a line denoting that it pierced every battle line it ever faced"; This is today's 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team.
In that maneuver, the “Old Hickory” Division operated as part of the provisional IV Corps. The division's final training event before induction came in August 1940 when the 30th Division participated in the Third Army maneuvers in the Kisatchie National Forest near Alexandria, Louisiana. For that maneuver, the division again operated as ...
Jackson refused to disband his troops; instead, he led them on the difficult march back to Nashville, earning the nickname "Hickory" (later "Old Hickory") for his toughness. [85] After returning to Nashville, Jackson and one of his colonels, John Coffee, got into a tavern brawl over honor with the brothers Jesse and Thomas Hart Benton. Nobody ...
"Old Hickory" – Andrew Jackson, U.S. general and President "Old Jube" – Jubal Early, Confederate general "Old Jubilee" – Jubal Early, Confederate general "Old Mac" – James McCudden, British First World War fighter ace "The Old Man of the Morea" – Theodoros Kolokotronis, military leader of the Greek War of Independence
The 30th Armored Brigade Combat Team (30th ABCT [2] or "Old Hickory") [1] is a modular heavy brigade of the United States Army National Guard. 30th ABCT relieved 3rd ABCT/4ID in Kuwait, 1 November 2019. [3] They returned to the U.S. in September 2020 and were replaced by the 2nd ABCT/1AD.
Polk, through much of his political career, was known as "Young Hickory", based on the nickname for Jackson, "Old Hickory". Polk's political career was as dependent on Jackson as his nickname implied. [26] The house where Polk spent his young adult life before his presidency, in Columbia, Tennessee, is his only private residence still standing.
Old Hickory, Tennessee, a town named for Jackson, near to the site of The Hermitage; Old Hickory Boulevard, the name of several roads in Nashville, Tennessee, named for Jackson; Old Hickory Lake, a man-made reservoir along the path of the Cumberland River in Middle Tennessee, named for Jackson