Joseph Hooker of the Union - commanding the Army of the Potomac.
general Hooker
This would be Major General Joseph "fighting Joe" Hooker. He succeeded Burnside as the new commander of the Army of the Potomac. Hooker would not be the last general that Lincoln appointed to this post.
Major General Joseph "Fighting Joe" Hooker succeeded General Burnside as the commander of the Army of the Potomac. Hooker was the third general Lincoln had as the leader of the North's premier army.
Major General Joseph Hooker
Major General Joe "Fighting Joe" Hooker was the commander of the Federal Army of the Potomac at Chancellorsville.
Fighting Joe Hooker was a Union General.
Major General Joseph Hooker and also Lieutenant-General Joseph Wheeler.Joe Hooker.It happened by mistake - there was a section in some document headed 'Fighting', followed by 'Joe Hooker', but the name stuck.Curiously, it was not viewed as a compliment. It was taken to indicate unseemly brawling, and Hooker did not appreciate it.
Joseph Hooker. It came from a document where his name was preceded by the word 'fighting', and there was a line-break which made it look like as though he was being dubbed 'Fighting Joe', and the name stuck. Curiously, he did not appreciate his new nickname. 'Fighting' was not regarded as a good attribute for a General. The rank-and-file would often be jailed for fighting. It suggested a rowdy individual.
Nathanael Greene. The CORRECT answer is: Smedley Butler
Joe Palooka in Fighting Mad - 1948 was released on: USA: 7 February 1948
Brigadier General Thomas Sumter was known both as the Carolina Gamecock and the Fighting Gamecock during the American Revolutionary War.
The Joe Palooka Story - 1954 Come Out Fighting - 1.20 was released on: USA: 1954