ANSWER
Joseph Johnston was replaced two time. The first one was after he was injured during the Peninsular Campaign and replaced byt Robert E. Lee.
The second one was during the Atlanta Campaign, when he was replaced by John Bell Hood.
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Johnson was frustrated with his inability to reach a solution in Vietnam, and the graphic images of American casualties suffered during the TET Offensive helped stoke anti-war sentiment among the American people. He relieved General Westmoreland of duty and replaced him with General Creighton Abrams.
Major General Joseph Hooker did not have a middle name but was given the nickname "Fighting Joe" by accident in newspaper "when the hyphen was omitted", newspaper readers loved the nickname and it stuck. Mostly because of his known fighting ability for the Union. At first Hooker himself did not like that nickname, yet through time he liked it more. * In response to the question... "might have been confused with General Joseph (Eggleston) Johnson, whom was harshly branded the nickname "Retreating Joe" because he lacked aggressiveness during the Civil War loosing more casualties than he took "to which could've prolonged the Confederacy's existence', opposite position of the above Joseph."
The Commander of the British Forces during the surrender was General William Howe. Howe replaced General Gage who returned to England after the Battle of Bunker Hill.
Andrew Johnson
was the key general of the south during the civil war