Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sir Frederick Philipse Robinson, GCB (September 1763 – 1 January 1852) was a soldier who fought for Britain during the American War of Independence.His father, Colonel Beverley Robinson, was a Virginian who moved to New York, marrying a wealthy heiress of the Philipse family with Dutch and Bohemian [1] ancestry, Susanna Philipse.
Sir Frederick Philipse Robinson (1763–1852), son of a Virginian soldier who fought for England during the American War of Independence, also was an Empire Loyalist.
The Loyal American Regiment was raised in mid-March 1777 by wealthy loyalist Beverley Robinson. Robinson, a childhood friend of George Washington, commanded the regiment until it was disbanded at the end of the war in 1783. Several of Beverley Robinson's sons were officers in the regiment, including Frederick Philipse Robinson.
General Sir Frederick Philipse Robinson, colonel of the regiment in the 1830s Bombardment of Canton December 1857. On the disbandment of the 2nd Battalion, the 1st was redesignated simply as the 59th (2nd Nottinghamshire) Regiment of Foot.
Frederick Philipse II (c. 1698 – July 26, 1751) was a merchant, landowner, and politician in British America. ... Susanna Philipse Robinson, ...
The Philipse family was a prominent Dutch family in New Netherlands and the British Province of New York.It owned both the vast 81 sq mi (210 km 2) hereditary estate in lower Westchester County, New York, Philipsburg Manor, the family seat, and the roughly 250 sq mi (650 km 2) Highland Patent, later known as the "Philipse Patent", in time today's Putnam County, New York.
Frederick Haldimand; James Inglis Hamilton; William Harcourt, 3rd Earl Harcourt; Charles Stanhope, 3rd Earl of Harrington; George Harris, 1st Baron Harris; George Vaughan Hart (British Army officer) Francis Rawdon-Hastings, 1st Marquess of Hastings; William Haviland; Andrew Hay (British Army officer) Sir John Hayes, 1st Baronet
1840–1852 Gen. Sir Frederick Philipse Robinson, GCB; 1852–1853 Lt-Gen. George Burrell, CB; 1853–1867 Gen. Sir Richard Lluellyn, KCB;