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In Flanders Fields was written by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae of the Canadian Army.
Lieutenant-Colonel John By was born on August 7, 1779 in London
Lieutenant Colonel. Always capitalized. Actually, only capitalize both words when used as part of a formal title, e.g. Lieutenant Colonel John Kurtz, US Army, or when used as a proper noun in place of an actual name, e.g. "We reported that the Captain had died to the Lieutenant Colonel" (where "Captain" and "Lieutenant Colonel" were specific people, not just generic ranks). In all other cases, the "L" should be capitalized (but the "C" should not) when it starts the beginning of a sentence. Neither should be capitalized when referring to the generic rank, e.g. "The meeting looked like a convocation of lieutenant colonels." Also, in that example, note how "lieutenant colonel" is puralized - adding an "s" to "colonel", not to "lieutenant".
The force was led by Colonel Andrew Pickens of South Carolina. Colonel John Dooly and Lieutenant Colonel Elijah Clarke of Georgia were members of the force.
John McCrae reached the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He was born in 1872 in Canada, and served in the First Word War.
The force was led by Colonel Andrew Pickens of South Carolina. Colonel John Dooly and Lieutenant Colonel Elijah Clarke of Georgia were members of the force.
This very powerful war poem was written by Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, MD - of the Canadian Army.
Lieutenant Colonel John Malcolm Thorpe Fleming "Jack" Churchill
Yes. He was a lieutenant colonel in the Confederacy during the Civil War. Yes. He was a lieutenant colonel in the Confederacy during the Civil War. During the war, he was injured by a saber. He was given morphine for his condition. This later led to his creation of French Wine Coca, now known as Coca-Cola.
On the American side: George Washington, Hugh Mercer and John Sullivan. On the British side: General Lord Cornwallis, Lieutenant colonel Charles Mawhood.
Sarah 'Sally' Townsend is known for being the recipient of the first recorded Valentine's Day letter in the US. It was sent to her by Lieutenant Colonel John Simcoe in 1779.
John Baillie - colonel - died in 1838.