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Sir Edward Walter Hamilton, GCB, KCVO, ISO, PC (7 July 1847 – 2 September 1908 [1]), also known as Eddy Hamilton, was a British political diarist and Joint Permanent Secretary to the Treasury. Biography
Edward Hamilton may refer to: Sir Edward Hamilton, 1st Baronet (1772–1851), Royal Navy admiral Sir Edward Hamilton (1800 ship), merchant ship; Edward D. Hamilton (1801–1883), secretary of the Oregon Territory, 1850–1853; Edward Hamilton (pastoralist) (1809–1898), British pastoralist in New South Wales and Member of Parliament for Salisbury
Hamilton was born on 22 March 1772, the second and younger son of Captain John Hamilton, who was subsequently created a baronet in 1776. Edward Hamilton's mother was Cassandra Agnes, sister of Admiral Charles Chamberlayne. Edward first appeared on the muster books of his father's ship, the 74-gun HMS Hector, in 1777 when he was five years old. [1]
Edward Smith Hamilton (March 21, 1917 – June 30, 2006) was an American army officer during World War II, and later a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operative in China, East Germany and Turkey. Hamilton graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1939.
Edward William Terrick Hamilton (26 November 1809 – 28 September 1898) was a British businessman and politician who spent fifteen years as a pastoralist in New ...
Major-General Sir Edward Owen Fisher Hamilton KCB (17 February 1854 – 30 March 1944) was an officer of the British Army during the late 19th century. Originally a junior officer in the Queen's Royal Regiment, he oversaw signalling in the Indian Army during the late nineteenth century, before commanding a battalion and then a brigade in the South African War.
Wormuth temporarily suspended Hamilton from his job as head of Army Materiel Command and referred the matter to the Defense Department’s inspector general, said Army Col. Randee Farrell, Wormuth ...
Edward Norton Hamilton Jr. (born February 14, 1947) [1] is an American sculptor living in Louisville, Kentucky, who specializes in public art.His most famous work is The Spirit of Freedom, a memorial to black Civil War veterans, that stands in Washington, DC, in the Shaw neighborhood near Howard University. [2]