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It runs up Hill 180, where the Battle of Bayonet Hill / Hill 180 Memorial is located. An annual memorial ceremony is hosted at this site under the lead of the US Army 35th Air Defense Artillery Brigade and the Colonel Lewis L. Millett Hill 180 Memorial VFW (Veterans of Foreign War) Post 8180. [15]
Charles Lilburn Lewis was the oldest of eight children born to Colonel Charles Lewis of Buck Island [a] and Mary Randolph. His maternal aunt, Jane Randolph Jefferson, was the mother of United States President Thomas Jefferson. [2] [4] The Lewis family were among the wealthy plantation and slave–owning class. [5]
Colonel Edwin Meese, USAR – Attorney General of the United States. Colonel Lewis L. Millett – Medal of Honor recipient and veteran of World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Lieutenant Colonel John Jacob Astor IV – Reputed wealthiest man in the United States when he died on the RMS Titanic in 1912.
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On 25 September Colonel William H. Lewis was given the command of about 200 soldiers, mostly cavalry, to pursue the Cheyenne in northern Kansas. On 27 September he found the trail of the Cheyenne in a hilly area north of present-day Scott City. The Cheyenne apparently planned to lure the soldiers into an ambush in a narrow ravine around which ...
John D. Millett (1912–1993), president of Miami University in Ohio; Kate Millett (1934–2017), American feminist writer and activist; Larry Millett (born 1947), American journalist and author; Lewis L. Millett (1920–2009), US Army officer; Martin Millett (born 1955), British archaeologist; Michael Millett (1977–1995), English footballer
Ronald was promoted to brigade command and Lt. Col. Gardner to lead the 4th Virginia. At the three-day Battle of Second Manassas, its ranks were reduced to fewer than 100 men, with 19 killed (including officers Col. William S.H. Baylor before his promotion to brigadier general could be approved, and Captains Hugh White and Andrew Gibson, and ...
In 1975, the United States Army Center of Military History published Building a Volunteer Army: The Fort Ord Contribution, by Moore and Lieutenant Colonel Jeff M. Tuten. The 139-page paperback is a monograph concerning the Project VOLAR experiments during Moore's tenure in command of Fort Ord in 1971–1973 in preparation for the end of the ...