「rear」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)2ページ目
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in August reported to Gibraltar as flagship for | Rear Admiral A. P. Niblack, Commander, US Forces Gib |
ed Mary H. McCalla (1877-1959), the daughter of | Rear Admiral Bowman H. McCalla. |
The ships steamed east of Kwajalein while | Rear Admiral Richmond K. Turner's Joint Expeditionar |
nt General Somervell, Lieutenant General Smith, | Rear Admiral Duncan, Rear Admiral McCormick, Major G |
He became a | Rear Admiral on 15 June 1665 and fought at the Battl |
His daughter Cara de la Montagnie Hall married | Rear Admiral Thomas Holdup Stevens III, but maintain |
On 4 May 1863, a report from | Rear Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee to Secretary of the |
Naval Air Force Atlantic commander | Rear Admiral R. J. O'Hanlon, however, disagreed with |
She transferred | Rear Admiral Winslow to patrol vessel USS Edorea (SP |
ed the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron under | Rear Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont and participated in t |
Rear Admiral Sarath Ratnakeerthi has the unique dist | |
Commander, Navy Recruiting Command is currently | Rear Admiral Craig S. Faller. |
r I, who retired from the Navy with the rank of | Rear Admiral His other siblings were Helen, Emily an |
Rear Admiral Christopher J. Parry CBE is a British f | |
gned to the West Gulf Blockading Squadron under | Rear Admiral David Farragut, Gertrude arrived off Mo |
She was named for | Rear Admiral Robert W. Copeland (1910-1973). |
n Ribbon and the Navy Unit Commendation Ribbon, | Rear Admiral Fluckey was also awarded the American D |
Retired from the Navy on April 10, 1894, | Rear Admiral Benham died on August 11, 1905 at Lake |
ling (22 September 1796-17 January 1880) was an | rear admiral in the United States Navy who served du |
Rear Admiral Dyer died in Melrose, Massachusetts, 28 | |
However, | Rear Admiral Benham was soon transferred to command |
e Battle of Lake Champlain; he rose to become a | Rear Admiral in the United States Navy and retired o |
HMS Royal Oak Flagship of | Rear Admiral H. E. C. Blagroven; Captain W.G. Benn; |
Rear Admiral Sir Cecil Halliday Jepson Harcourt - He | |
vance force, led by Col. Ulric Dahlgren, son of | Rear admiral John Dahlgren, should penetrate Richmon |
, sponsored by Mrs. Claude S. Gillette, wife of | Rear Admiral Gillette; and commissioned 30 September |
ousetown, Pennsylvania in 1862 and purchased by | Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter at Pittsburgh, Penns |
The remaining two escort carriers from Taffy 1, | Rear Admiral George R. Henderson's COMCARDIV 28 Chen |
After joining | Rear Admiral Monroe Kelley's Northern Attack Group o |
Rear Admiral Hugh Marrack, DSC, CBE,(5 July 1888- 12 | |
In 1940, | Rear Admiral Percy W. Nelles, then chief of naval st |
Rear Admiral John Moresby (1830-1922), surveyed the | |
hn Birdsell Oren (born December 27, 1909) was a | rear admiral in the United States Coast Guard. |
rt of its screen which was under the command of | Rear Admiral Raymond A. Spruance. |
hn Magaw (2002), Admiral James Loy (2002-2003), | Rear Admiral David M. Stone (2003-2005), Kip Hawley |
ly minimal Luftwaffe reconnaissance to aid him, | Rear Admiral Bey was unable to locate the convoy. |
Rear Admiral David W. Taylor (left), Chief of the Bu | |
Mississippi River with important dispatches for | Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter. |
An Allied force-commanded by | Rear Admiral Walden L. Ainsworth and comprising the |
On June 3, 2011, | Rear Admiral retired form the U.S. Coast Guard after |
A portion of | Rear Admiral David D. Porter's Mississippi Squadron |
om his flagship Minotaur with second in command | Rear Admiral Eardley Wilmot onboard Agincourt. |
45, the 59th U.S. Navy Destroyer Division under | Rear Admiral William A. Glassford and Commander Paul |
He was the son of | Rear Admiral Augustus F. Fechteler. |
ed by Chief Engineer Alban C. Stimers following | Rear Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont's failed bombardment |
y years of World War II, Ingram was promoted to | Rear Admiral on January 10, 1941 and served as Comma |
Promoted to | Rear Admiral in June 1916, he was made Flag Officer, |
Rear Admiral Greene died in Jaffrey, New Hampshire o | |
t, the US Navy formed TG 16.22 under command of | Rear Admiral Griffin, which was then centered on the |
ed that he did not intend to suffer the fate of | Rear Admiral Ernest Troubridge, who in August had be |
As | Rear Admiral Surface Ships he was also the “tribal c |
She was the first ship named for | Rear Admiral Francis Ramsay. |
n days later Pulford and his naval counterpart, | Rear Admiral Spooner, where amongst the last to leav |
with Transport Group XRAY) under the command of | Rear Admiral Richmond K. Turner's Task Force TARE (A |
agship for Amphibious Group 1, now commanded by | Rear Admiral Lorenzo S. Sabin, Jr., until June 1954, |
These were: Able Seaman Ginger, Lt. Bates, | Rear Admiral Ironbridge, the Padre and Captain Ignat |
Rear Admiral Crumpacker was born in LaPorte, Indiana | |
Rear Admiral Thomas also served in the Enlisted Pers | |
the battleship Petr Velikyy. he was promoted to | rear Admiral in 1893 and Vice Admiral in 1889 |
Rear Admiral Samuel E. Morison, official historian o | |
Rear Admiral Goldsborough died on February 20, 1877. | |
However, on his promotion to | Rear Admiral on 1 November 1943, he commanded Desron |
Maurice Denham as | Rear Admiral Sir Frederick Grafton |
lcanal with the No. 2 Attack Unit consisting of | Rear Admiral Takama's flagship Akizuki, Harusame, Mu |
board her during the Battle of Mobile Bay with | Rear Admiral David Glasgow Farragut's Union fleet on |
USS Selfridge (DD-320) was named for the elder | Rear Admiral Selfridge, while USS Selfridge (DD-357) |
but an act of Congress in 1906 promoted him to | rear admiral in appreciation for his services during |
Rear Admiral Karl Rudolf Brommy (changed his name to | |
The fleet was actually organized earlier under | Rear Admiral Alan G. Kirk before all naval forces in |
nder, Commander, Captain, Commodore and finally | Rear Admiral on 1 January 2002. |
Unfortunately, the bombardment gave | Rear Admiral Ryukichi Tamura the impression that the |
ay, 25 November 1943, Japanese aircraft spotted | Rear Admiral Turner's task force steaming a few mile |
He was promoted to | rear admiral on 15 November. |
ssian) (1809 - March 7(19), 1855) was a Russian | rear admiral (1853) and hero of the Siege of Sevasto |
7 in the Antarctic region of the South Pacific, | Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd and his party were flow |
erly named Kentucky and Union, was purchased by | Rear Admiral Hiram Paulding for the Navy from C. W. |
Rear Admiral Flaherty received her Masters of Scienc | |
Rear Admiral Schenck died at Dayton, Ohio and is int | |
Mikawa was promoted to | rear admiral on 1 December 1936. |
ied 11 June 1927, Castle Point, New York) was a | Rear Admiral in the United States Navy. |
were named by US-SCAN, on the recommendation of | Rear Admiral Byrd, after James I. Bush, American fin |
Samuel P. De Bow, Jr. is a former | rear admiral in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric |
Rear Admiral George Henry Wadleigh (September 28, 18 | |
Rear Admiral Edmund Ernest Garcia (1905-1971) was a | |
The Queen is appointed a | Rear Admiral in the Royal Norwegian Navy and a Briga |
Rear Admiral Michael G. T. Harris was a Royal Navy o | |
Rear Admiral Carpenter has accepted numerous recalls | |
Rear Admiral Frank Edmund Beatty (26 November 1853 - | |
ship of the United States Navy to be named for | Rear Admiral Benjamin F. Isherwood (1822-1915). |
England's senior officer in the Pacific, | Rear Admiral Thomas, arrived two weeks later with th |
On 28 October, | Rear Admiral David D. Porter, the new commanding off |
Commander, Navy Region Southeast, | Rear Admiral Tim Alexander was in attendance along w |
ited States imposed a military government under | Rear Admiral Harry Shepard Knapp. |
) and Johnston (DD-557) joined her in screening | Rear Admiral Clifton Sprague's unit, "Taffy 3" which |
She was named for | Rear Admiral Norman Scott, who was killed during a s |
USS Robison (DDG-12), named for | Rear Admiral Samuel Shelburne Robison, was a Charles |
n of the Navy General Board during World War I. | Rear Admiral Badger died September 7, 1932 and is bu |
is (January 16, 1807 - February 18, 1877) was a | Rear Admiral in the United States Navy, serving prim |
In 1940, | Rear Admiral Percy W. Nelles, then chief of naval st |
He was named | Rear Admiral in 1875, Vice-Admiral in 1879 and Admir |
Named by US-ACAN for | Rear Admiral James R. Reedy, USN, Commander, U.S. Na |
Rear Admiral (John) Gervaise (Beresford) Cooke CB DS | |
other Peruvian officers, objected to plans for | Rear Admiral John R. Tucker -formerly a commander of |
On 10 June 1863, | Rear Admiral Du Pont had received reports Atlanta wa |
S Fechteler (DD-870) were named for his father, | Rear Admiral Augustus F. Fechteler. |
e Admiral Sir Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke and | Rear Admiral Charles Saunders. |
Rear Admiral Martin Alabaster MA MSc CEng FIET is a | |
Rear Admiral Barry Kennedy Atkins (August 2, 1911 - | |
ashiro along with their escorts in the hands of | Rear Admiral Jesse B. Oldendorf's fleet and aircraft |
re 24 December 1943, she became the flagship of | Rear Admiral Daniel E. Barbey, USN, Commander Sevent |
currently known as Jayapura) as the flagship of | Rear Admiral Barbey's Northern Attack Force bound fo |
d to as the Tulagi Support Group), commanded by | Rear Admiral Kuninori Marumo consisted of two light |
nsored by Miss Doris Bentley, the grandniece of | Rear Admiral Thatcher; and commissioned on 14 Januar |
Rear Admiral Robert S. Harward, USN - Senior Interag | |
t he held until to 1913 when he was promoted to | rear admiral (in May) and relinquished his aide de c |
Rear Admiral Evans commanded the Great White Fleet 1 | |
He was promoted to | rear admiral in December 1942. |
shaw and Flasher-the last two of the submarines | Rear Admiral Fife had deployed-encountered the Compl |
Rear Admiral Dufek was the director of the Mariners' | |
Promoted | Rear Admiral in 1899, he went on to serve as Command |
deputy collector of customs at that port wired | Rear Admiral Francis Gregory, the supervisor of cons |
For the military rank, see | Rear admiral (United States). |
He transferred to the 50-gun HMS Chatham under | Rear Admiral Parry, in 1772, in the Leeward Islands. |
The mountain was discovered and photographed by | Rear Admiral Byrd on the Baselaying Flight of Novemb |
during the War of 1812, and was the brother of | Rear Admiral John Rodgers. |
n 1 July 1919, Captain on 16 February 1925, and | Rear Admiral on 1 July 1937. |
She was the second Navy ship named after | Rear Admiral Elie A. F. La Vallette. |
ng Arbuthnott (1789 - 8 May 1871) was a British | Rear Admiral during the Victorian era. |
He was promoted to | Rear Admiral in 1908 and appointed Commander in Chie |
tish officers: Vice Admiral Alexander Cochrane, | Rear Admiral Sir George Cockburn, and Major General |
His successor in that position was | Rear Admiral Gary Blore. |
Dahlgren was born, in 1842, to | Rear Admiral John A. Dahlgren and Madeleine (Mary) V |
Commissioned | rear admiral on 25 July 1866, Rowan served as Comman |
lantic Blockading Squadron, Anemone reported to | Rear Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee at Beaufort, North |
Rear Admiral Sir Richard Trowbridge (1920-2003), KCV | |
Tsukahara was promoted to | rear admiral on November 15, 1935. |
Rear Admiral Charles Vaughan-Lee, Director of the Ad | |
Rear Admiral Sugiura was later promoted to Vice Admi | |
ed for the Gulf of Mexico in late July, joining | Rear Admiral David G. Farragut's West Gulf Blockadin |
ndred men, including Vice Admiral Hashimoto and | Rear Admiral Sugiura, perished with her. |
s on 25 December 1864, but the naval commander, | Rear Admiral David Porter was not to be denied. |
uk and USS Bibb were busy laying buoys to guide | Rear Admiral Samuel Francis Du Pont's ironclad floti |
Rear Admiral Daniel B. Lloyd assumed the duties of M | |
According to the IDF's Deputy Navy Commander | Rear Admiral Rani Ben-Yehuda, the weapons may have b |
Battleship Division 9 (BatDiv 9), commanded by | Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman to strengthen the British G |
Rear Admiral Farquhar retired on 11 April 1902, and | |
On 18 March 1915, the British commander, | Rear Admiral John de Robeck, launched a concerted ef |
essage from General William Tecumseh Sherman to | Rear Admiral John A. Dahlgren, commanding the South |
Paul M. Blayney is a | Rear Admiral in the United States Coast Guard. |
On 3 June 1808, | Rear Admiral Thornbrough sent Sir Francis Laforey in |
Rear Admiral Parr was born in Wellington, New Zealan | |
He is assigned to serve under | Rear Admiral Leighton, Lady Barbara Wellesley's new |
General MacArthur and | Rear Admiral Barbey landed on the day of the invasio |
adron, 1st Division of the IJN 1st Fleet, under | Rear Admiral Nashiba Tokioki. |
Lucy La Vallette Little, great-granddaughter of | Rear Admiral LaVallette; and commissioned 12 August |
bruary 12, 1942 under the command of Royal Navy | Rear Admiral John Gregory Crace. |
Rear Admiral Maxine Conder was Director of the Unite | |
f the First Balkan War, Kountouriotis was named | Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the Hellenic |
Rear Admiral John Henry Russell (4 July 1827 - 1 Apr | |
She was named for | Rear Admiral Richard Nott Antrim (1907-1969). |
His children were Elsie Calder who married to | Rear Admiral Robert C. Lee; and William M. Calder II |
oined Admiral Kolchak, who gave him the rank of | rear admiral and assigned him command the White Move |
Samuel Perez, Jr., a | Rear Admiral in the United States Navy, is the curre |
Argentine | Rear Admiral Allara, who was in charge of the task f |
Kevin R. Slates is a | Rear Admiral in the United States Navy. |
Radford was promoted to | rear admiral on 25 July 1866, and commanded the Euro |
Sazanami was flagship for | Rear Admiral Matsuji Ijuin during the Battle off Hor |
a United States Navy warship and an ironclad of | Rear Admiral Saldanha da Gama's rebel fleet. |
Promoted to | Rear Admiral 16 July 1862, he served throughout the |
royer USS Macomb (DD-458) was named in honor of | Rear Admiral Macomb and his first cousin, Commodore |
t the Admiralty, he was promoted to the rank of | Rear Admiral in February 1919. |
Rear Admiral David B. Macomb, USN (27 February 1827 | |
lass ships were present under the leadership of | Rear Admiral Arthur Leveson flying his flag in the O |
steamer West Point was received at about 12:30, | Rear Admiral Albert Gleaves ordered Cushing and othe |
On the 14th, | Rear Admiral Samuel Phillips Lee, the commander of t |
Rear admiral Roger Charles Moylan-Jones (born 18 Apr | |
Rear Admiral George Pryse Campbell (1793-12 August 1 | |
He became | Rear Admiral for the Mediterranean and Channel Fleet |
he West Gulf Blockading Squadron and supporting | Rear Admiral David Farragut's operations through muc |
wo support groups: a Cruiser Cover Force led by | Rear Admiral HM Burrough in the cruiser HMS Nigeria, |
In 1969, | Rear Admiral Bardshar led an investigation into the |
In 1896 he was promoted to | rear admiral (lower half) and first aide-de-camp to |
At Butler's request, | Rear Admiral David Farragut assigned naval officers |
r 1903 to March 1904, she served as flagship of | Rear Admiral Henry Glass, Commander of the Pacific S |
e Italian 2nd Cruiser Division was commanded by | Rear Admiral Ferdinando Casardi and consisted of the |
Born the third son of | Rear Admiral Edward Villiers and educated at Oundle |
reassessment of the first raid casualties), and | Rear Admiral Kevin Scarce (governor of South Austral |
His successor, | Rear Admiral Charles P. Snyder, spent a year reviewi |
Rear Admiral Anthony (Gerry) Carwardine AO is a reti | |
He was also | Rear Admiral and then Vice-Admiral of the United Kin |
destroyer of the United States Navy, named for | Rear Admiral John Hood (1859-1919). |
Richard A. Appelbaum is a retired | Rear Admiral in the United States Coast Guard. |
arbor Navy Yard on 7 December 1941, with future | Rear Admiral George Stephen Morrison onboard. |
was called the ANZAC Squadron and was led by UK | Rear Admiral John Gregory Crace. |
with the light cruisers Oleg and Bogatyr, under | Rear Admiral Mikhail Bakhirev. |
her complement and then to report for duty with | Rear Admiral Samuel F. DuPont at Port Royal, South C |
omandorski Islands by a U.S. Navy fleet, led by | Rear Admiral Charles H. McMorris, and made up of one |
Rear Admiral Sir Robert Woodard, KCVO, DL (born 13 J | |
Rear Admiral William Herman Brockman, Jr. (18 Novemb | |
0, sponsored by Miss Helen Griffin, daughter of | Rear Admiral Robert Griffin; and commissioned on 25 |
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