Haig died 29 January 1928
General Sir Douglas Haig was British Commander in chief 1916 but was not very good!
Sir Douglas Haig and Alexander Haig are not directly related. Sir Douglas Haig was a British Army officer and a key figure in World War I, while Alexander Haig was a U.S. Army general and Secretary of State in the 1980s. They share the same last name but come from different backgrounds and eras without any familial connection.
Douglas Haig's family owned the whiskey distillery that produced Haig's Whisky and that used to advertise with the slogan 'Don't be vague. Ask for Haig.'
Sir Douglas Haig (1861-1928), British Field Marshal and Commander in Chief of the British Expedionary Forces during WW1.
* Douglas Haig for the UK, * Ferdinand Foch for the French, and * Max von Gallwitz and Fritz von Bellow for the German Empire.
He had four children people with rather long names.
I believe its General Sir Douglas Haig.
Sir Douglas Haig
Douglas Haig was born on June 19, 1861.
Douglas Haig was born on June 19, 1861.
G. A. B. Dewar has written: 'Sir Douglas Haig's command'
Douglas Haig died on January 29, 1928 at the age of 66.