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Joseph Ball (May 2, 1649 – July 11, 1711) was an English-born justice, vestryman, lieutenant colonel, and Burgess in the Colony of Virginia. [ 1 ] Ball was the father of Mary Ball Washington and the maternal grandfather of George Washington , the First President of the United States .
Col. Joseph Matthäus Ball, grandfather of Gen. George Washington, was born in May 1649 in England, settled in Virginia during a period of population growth in the region when the Millenbeck community was in Northumberland County prior to the formation of Lancaster County. [2] [3]
Col Joseph W. Keifer. 6th Maryland: Col John Watt Horn ... Ltc William N. Foster; 122nd Ohio: Col William H. Ball; 138th Pennsylvania: Col Matthew R. McClennan (w ...
The 16th Squadron operated the Northrop Grumman E-8C Joint STARS (Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System), an advanced ground surveillance and battle management system. J-STARS detected, located, classified, tracks and targets ground movements on the battlefield, communicating real-time information through secure data links with combat ...
10th Vermont: Col William W. Henry (w), Cpt Henry H. Dewey; 2nd Brigade Col William H. Ball 6th Maryland: Maj Joseph C. Hill; 9th New York Heavy Artillery: Maj James W. Snyder; 110th Ohio: Ltc Otho H. Binkley; 122nd Ohio: Ltc Moses M. Granger; 126th Ohio: Maj George W. Voorhes (w), Cpt George W. Hoge; 67th Pennsylvania: Lt John F. Young
On D+3 the 24th RCT relieved the 25th 133 Plaque from the estate of Lt Col Joseph J. McCarthy and is zinc. The 24th Marine Regiment was activated at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California on 26 March 1943. All three battalions were organized at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, North Carolina prior to activation of the Regimental Headquarters.
The 13th Ohio Infantry Regiment organized at Columbus, Ohio, on April 20 – May 7, 1861, under Colonel Abram S. Piatt in response to President Lincoln's call for 75,000 volunteers. [1] The regiment moved to Camp Dennison near Cincinnati, Ohio, on May 9 and remained on duty there until June 22 when it was reorganized as a three-years regiment ...
The Battle of Cool Spring, also known as Castleman's Ferry, Island Ford, Parker's Ford, and Snicker's Ferry, was a battle in the American Civil War fought July 17–18, 1864, in Clarke County, Virginia, as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864.