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Quiz Me! This is the place to test your knowledge of WWII & military history. Quizzes have rules, make sure you read the rules and follow them before participating.

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  #151 (permalink)  
Old April 11th, 2008, 01:43 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Nope. Just filtered to those who died in 1987, and only bothered looking at the ones with 1987 in the birth - death behind their names. Not too bad, less frustrating than doing my usual key word search and having little or nothing come up!

So, here is one. He was on both sides.
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  #152 (permalink)  
Old April 11th, 2008, 02:51 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Pietro Badoglio
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  #153 (permalink)  
Old April 11th, 2008, 10:08 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

You have it Jeff. Your go!

Pietro Badoglio - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pietro Badoglio, 1st Duke of Addis Abeba (September 28, 1871November 1, 1956) was an Italian soldier and politician. He was a member of the National Fascist Party and fought alongside his nation's troops under Benito Mussolini in the Second Italo-Abyssinian War; his efforts gained him the title Duke of Addis Abeba.
In July 24, 1943 as Italy had suffered several setbacks in World War II, Mussolini summoned the Grand Council of Fascism, this led to the Fascist vote of no confidence against him. The following day Il Duce was removed from government by king Victor Emmanuel III and arrested. Badoglio was declared Prime Minister of Italy and while mass confusion in Italy reigned, he eventually signed an armistice with the Allies. When this was made public, it threw Italy into chaos. The king and Badoglio fled Rome leaving the Italian Army with no orders to follow.
Eventually from Malta on October 13, Badoglio and the Kingdom of Italy declared war against Nazi Germany. Badoglio did not stay as Prime Minister for long however, as world opinion at that stage desired a person with a non-Fascist past to head the government. By 1944, Badoglio was replaced by Ivanoe Bonomi of the Labour Democratic Party.
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  #154 (permalink)  
Old April 12th, 2008, 12:53 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

I am hoping that this one will cause y'all grief.

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  #155 (permalink)  
Old April 12th, 2008, 09:03 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Grief is right. I've read about the man and seen the photo before, but alas cannot attach name to piciture.

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  #156 (permalink)  
Old April 12th, 2008, 10:08 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Admiral John Lesslie Hall Jr

John L. Hall, Jr - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

also
Admiral John L. Hall, Jr., USN (Retired), (1891-1978)

John Lesslie Hall, Jr., was born in Williamsburg, Virginia, on 11 April 1891. He entered the U.S. Naval Academy in 1909, excelled in athletics, and graduated in June 1913. As a junior officer he served in several ships, among them the battleships North Dakota and Utah. During World War I Lieutenant Hall trained engineering personnel on the old battleship Illinois and was an engineer officer on the new destroyer Philip. During the years immediately following World War I, he had sea duty, mainly in destroyers, and served ashore as a Naval Academy instructor.

From the mid-1920s until 1934, Lieutenant Commander Hall was an Aide to the Naval District commandant at Charleston, South Carolina, was Executive Officer of the submarine tender Camden, commanded the destroyer Childs, spent three years with the Naval Academy's physical training and athletics programs, and was Navigator of the training ship Wyoming. Promoted to Commander in 1934, he went to the Far East to serve in the heavy cruiser Augusta and, while with the Asiatic Fleet, commanded the gunboat Asheville and a destroyer division. During the later 1930s Commander Hall was at the Naval War College, initially as a student, then as a member of that institution's staff. In July 1940 he achieved the rank of Captain and was given command of the old battleship Arkansas. This was followed by staff duty with elements of the Atlantic Fleet.

In mid-1942 John L. Hall was given a temporary appointment as Rear Admiral and during the invasion of Morocco that fall was Chief of Staff to the operation's Naval commander. This was followed by command of the Naval forces and facilities in that region. Holding amphibious force commands from February 1943 onwards, Rear Admiral Hall was in charge of important components of the invasions of Sicily in July of that year and of the Italian mainland in September. He was sent to England in November to participate in preparations for the invasion of France and, in the June 1944 Normandy landings, commanded the amphibious assault on "Omaha" Beach. Transferred to the Pacific Fleet's Amphibious Forces in October, Hall participated in the invasion of Okinawa in the spring of 1945.
In October 1945 he became Commander Amphibious Forces, Pacific Fleet, receiving the rank of Vice Admiral a few months later. Following service as Commandant, Fourteenth Naval District, and Commander Hawaiian Sea Frontier, in 1948 he became Commandant of the Armed Forces Staff College. Vice Admiral Hall's final assignment was as Commander Western Sea Frontier and Commander Pacific Reserve Fleet from August 1951 until his retirement at the beginning of May 1953. Upon leaving active duty, he was advanced to the rank of Admiral on the basis of a combat award. John L. Hall, Jr., died at Scottsdale, Arizona, on 6 March 1978.

The guided missile frigate USS John L. Hall (FFG-32), commissioned in 1982, is named in honor of Admiral Hall.
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  #157 (permalink)  
Old April 13th, 2008, 04:01 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

She shoots, she scores, a slap shot from the point. (I did that in honor of the NHL playoffs that you are so excited about.)
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  #158 (permalink)  
Old April 13th, 2008, 04:26 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

I knew I wouldn't get much sympathy!

Here's another one...
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  #159 (permalink)  
Old April 15th, 2008, 02:33 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Hint: Above and below the sea
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  #160 (permalink)  
Old April 17th, 2008, 04:43 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Hmm, no one seems to be biting, here is more on this person.


His wartime awards were the Distinguished Service Medal and two gold stars in lieu of second and third awards, and the Legion of Merit. The following is quoted directly from the Navy Office of Information concerning Distinguished Service Medal:

"For exceptionally meritorious service as Commander Submarine Forces, Pacific Fleet, from February 1943 to September 1945. A forceful leader, professionally skilled in the performance of a vital assignment, vice Admiral was responsible for the strategic planning and tactical execution of submarine operations which culminated in the sinking by the forces under his command of over one thousand hostile ships, including one battleship, seven aircraft carriers and five cruisers, and in the damaging of more than five hundred additional ships. Rendering distinguished service in support of vital amphibious operations in the forward areas of the Pacific, Vice Admiralalso contributed to the development and effective employment of new weapons of extreme advantage to the Allied cause."
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  #161 (permalink)  
Old April 17th, 2008, 02:51 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Charles Lockwood?
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  #162 (permalink)  
Old April 18th, 2008, 04:35 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

You got it, Jeff! Your go

Charles A Lockwood

an excerpt

In June 1939, he became Chief of Staff to Commander, Submarine Force, U.S. Fleet, in light cruiser RICHMOND (CL-9). This important service was interrupted in February 1941 when he was sent to London as naval attache and principal observer for submarines. Following promotion to rear admiral in March 1942, he proceeded to west Australia as Commander, Submarines, Southwest Pacific, serving under Douglas MacArthur until February 1943. Following the death of Rear Admiral Thomas England in February 1943, Lockwood shifted his flag to Pearl Harbor, assuming direction Pacific Fleet submarines, serving directly under the Command of Fleet Admiral Nimitz. He was promoted to Vice Admiral in October 1943.

During his tour, Lockwood improvised tactics to make the most effective use of submarines and pushed the Navy’s Bureaus of Ships and Ordnance to provide his men with the most effective submarines and torpedoes possible. He oversaw the tests that proved early U.S. torpedo unreliability and prompted the improvements that made them the highly effective weapons they became in 1944 and 1945. U.S. submarines sank more than 5.6 million tons of enemy shipping including more than 1,100 merchant ships and 200 warships. U.S. submarine attacks on enemy shipping accounted for more than fifty percent of enemy ships lost during the war.

Of the 16,000 U.S. submariners in the war, 375 officers and 3,131 enlisted men on fifty-two submarines were lost. The U.S. submarine force's wartime success was achieved with the lowest casualty rate of any combatant submarine service on either side. Lockwood's strong leadership and devotion to his troops won him the nickname "Uncle Charlie".
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  #163 (permalink)  
Old April 21st, 2008, 03:31 AM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

How is this fine gentleman?

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  #164 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd, 2008, 01:23 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

That would be Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay
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  #165 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd, 2008, 01:53 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

yes, it is.

You're go.
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  #166 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd, 2008, 02:43 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Who is this General
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  #167 (permalink)  
Old April 23rd, 2008, 04:06 PM
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Default Re: Name that general! (with written questions too)

Franco?
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