Ad
related to: captain george's menu virginia beach
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
It is located south of the Virginia Beach Courthouse complex, still surrounded by farm land but facing increasing encroachment by suburban homes. [ 3 ] The house is a wood frame two-story structure with a brick American bond chimney with Flemish bond headers and asphalt shingles.
English: Title: Captain George Riggs Gaither of K Company, 1st Virginia Cavalry Abstract/medium: 1 photograph : half-plate ambrotype, hand-colored ; 15.9 x 12.6 cm (case) Date between 1861 and 1863
The surfmen had made fires on the beach to alert any survivors to their location. Robinson tells how miraculously all four Diktator crew members made it to the beach; alive. [11] He also details how the Captain of the Diktator made his way to the beach. The Captain survived, but others did not, including his wife and their four-year-old son. [11]
George Gibson (1775–1861) was the United States Army's first Commissary General of Subsistence, holding the office from 1818 to 1861. He served as an infantry officer during the War of 1812 , then briefly as Quartermaster General , before being appointed Commissary General.
Gist's Additional Continental Regiment was an American infantry unit that served for four years in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War.Authorized in January 1777, the unit was intended to be made up of four companies of light infantry and 500 Indian scouts.
Captain George Kendall (b. c. 1570 – d. 1608) was a member of the first council appointed at Jamestown in the Colony of Virginia. He arrived with the founding fleet, and was sworn to the Governor's Council on 23 May [O.S. 13 May] 1607. After landfall was made at Jamestown Island, he was apparently instrumental in the construction of the first ...
Captain George Newman Bliss (July 22, 1837 – August 29, 1928) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War.Bliss received the country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor, for his actions to counter a Confederate advance in Waynesboro, Virginia on 28 September 1864. [1]
Watt, whom Allibone follows, seems to identify Roberts with a Mr. Roberts who was shipwrecked in 1692, and whose story of the disaster is published in William Hacke's ‘Collection of Original Voyages’ (London, small 8vo, 1699); but Mr. Roberts, commander and part owner of the vessel wrecked in 1692, can scarcely have been less than sixty in ...