Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Joe Douglas (born July 20, 1976) [1] is an American football executive who is the general manager of the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). Prior to joining the Jets in 2019, Douglas was a longtime scout with the Baltimore Ravens before becoming an executive with the Chicago Bears and Philadelphia Eagles .
He adopted the moniker "Colonel Britton", [2] and his identity was a closely guarded secret until after the war. [3] He was in charge of the BBC's wartime "V for Victory" campaign. He created the "Continental V Army". [4] By the time of the disclosure of his identity in 1945 he was director of the European news department of the BBC.
Craig Rob Roy McGregor (12 October 1933 – 22 January 2022) was an Australian journalist, essayist, academic, cultural observer and critic. Life and career [ edit ] McGregor grew up in Jamberoo and then Gundagai in New South Wales , before his family moved to Sydney . [1]
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Lieutenant-Colonel (temporary Brigadier) Douglas Harry Bond, MVO, AMIMechE, (26102), Royal Army Service Corps. Colonel John Banks Brady, DSO, ED, Southern Rhodesia Defence Force. Lieutenant-Colonel Gerald Wilberforce Graham-Bowman, MC, Cumberland Home Guard. Lieutenant-Colonel Henry James Brooks, DSO, MC, TD, (23533), The Hampshire Regiment.
The MacGregors killed many of them and forced them into a retreat in which they had to fight through John MacGregor's division which proved even more disastrous. [3] However, according to the Clan Gregor account, John MacGregor who was the chief's brother was killed in the battle. [8]
Douglas Putnam (August 21, 1838 – August 11, 1918) was a U.S. Army colonel in the American Civil War. After serving at the Battle of Shiloh he became a member of General Ulysses S. Grant's staff. Douglas was the son of Douglas and Mary A. (Hildreth) Putnam, both from Ohio.
During his time in that office, he was promoted to Major on 12 July 1814, Lieutenant-Colonel on 1 August 1818, Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant on 1 May 1824 and Colonel on 5 June 1829; he was posted a Lieutenant-Colonel in the 23rd Native Infantry in 1820, the 11th Native Infantry in 1823 and the 22nd Native Infantry in 1824, before he was ...