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The name of Bertier's girlfriend, [6] and Bertier and Campbell's relationship, were misrepresented. [7] Bertier's on-the-field portrayal in the film, however, is almost entirely correct. As the team's defensive captain, Bertier was a dominating force on the linebacking corps and received All-American honors following the team's championship season.
Grange Hall in Solon, Maine, circa 1910. The National Grange, a.k.a.The Grange, officially named The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry, is a social organization in the United States that encourages families to band together to promote the economic and political well-being of the community and agriculture. [1]
Louis-Alexandre Berthier, prince de Neuchâtel et Valangin, prince de Wagram (French: [lwi alɛksɑ̃dʁ bɛʁtje]; 20 November 1753 – 1 June 1815) was a French military commander who served during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.
Charles Bertier (1860–1924), French landscape painter. Charles Bertier (journalist) (1821–1882), Governor of Martinique from 1867 to 1869; Georges Bertier (1877–1962), French educator; Gerry Bertier (1953–1981), Virginia high school American football player; Michel Bertier (1695–1740), surgeon-major of Quebec, Canada
The position of each particular agent in the field is a result of interaction between the specific rules of the field, agent's habitus and agent's capital (social, economic and cultural). [5] Fields interact with each other, and are hierarchical : most are subordinate to the larger field of power and class relations.
He married his first wife, Marie Françoise L'Huillier de La Serre, in 1746. They had five children. The oldest of five children, Louis Alexandre Berthier (1753), would become Marshal of France, with the other three sons also serving in the French Army: Charles (1760) in North America, while César (1765) and Victor-Léopold (1770) became generals during the Napoleonic Wars. [2]
After the American Revolutionary War began the year before, in 1775, many patriots assimilated into the Continental Army, which was commanded by George Washington and which secured victory against the British Army, leading the British to acknowledge the sovereign independence of the colonies, reflected in the Treaty of Paris, which led to the ...
Michel Bertier (Berthier) (c. 1695 – 5 September 1740) was the surgeon-major of Quebec and was surgeon to the Hôtel-Dieu there as well.. Bertier had frequent professional contact with Michel Sarrazin who was surgeon-major of the colonial regular troops.