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William Crawford (September 2, 1722 – June 11, 1782) was an American military officer and surveyor who worked as a land agent alongside ... William Crawford (soldier)
William John Crawford (May 19, 1918 – March 15, 2000) was a United States Army soldier who received the Medal of Honor for his actions during World War II. The Medal of Honor award was believed to be posthumous, although he was a prisoner of war at the time. He was also a career U.S. Army enlisted soldier, reaching the rank of master sergeant.
Because this was a volunteer expedition and not a regular army operation, the men elected their officers. The candidates for the top position were David Williamson, the militia colonel who had commanded the Gnadenhütten expedition, and William Crawford, an experienced soldier and frontiersman who had resigned from the Continental Army in 1781 ...
William Crawford (soldier) (1732–1782), soldier in American Revolution, burnt at the stake by Native Americans; William Lyne Crawford (1839–1920), American Confederate soldier and lawyer; William J. Crawford (1918–2000), American soldier and Medal of Honor recipient; William Crawford (Royal Navy officer) (1907–2003), British admiral
William Overton Callis; Marquis Calmes; David Campbell (judge, born 1750) Edward Carrington; John Champe (soldier) William Christian (Virginia politician) Green Clay; Matthew Clay; Richard Conway (mayor) William Crawford (soldier) John Crittenden Sr.
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In April 2012, Martz was 26 and a Marine sergeant already on his third combat deployment, in the Kajaki District of southern Afghanistan. He’d lost a good friend in combat, 22-year-old Lance Cpl. William H. Crouse IV, of Woodruff, S.C. Martz’s unit, 1st Battalion 10th Marines, had taken other casualties.
William Crawford (his last name was also spelled Craford or Crafford) (died before April 15, 1762) was an American soldier, politician, and founder of Portsmouth, Virginia. [1] He served as a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses for over thirty years.