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Edward T. Durant "Limbo" 1988: Perry Mason: The Case of the Lady in the Lake [4] Doug Vickers: TV Movie 1989: Fire and Rain [4] Captain Edward Conners: TV Movie 1989: The Twilight Zone [21] Maj. Alex McAndrews "The Wall" 1991: Murder, She Wrote [18]: 249 Ben Olston "Thursday's Child" 1991-1992: Santa Barbara [4] David Raymond: 114 Episodes 1993 ...
Captain Edward J. Foy commanded the Oklahoma for more than a year, mainly involving training exercises. Before Oklahoma, he commanded evacuations from Spain during the Spanish Civil War. [17] He was relieved of command after a collision with a barge. [18] Howard D. Bode: 1 November 1941 – 7:30 am, 7 December 1941 1 month: Captain
HMS Rawalpindi was a British armed merchant cruiser (a converted ocean liner employed as a convoy escort, as a patrol vessel, or to enforce a blockade) that was sunk in a surface action against the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau during the first months of the Second World War. Her captain was Edward Kennedy.
Admiral Edward Edwards (c. 1742 – 13 April 1815) was a British naval officer best known as the captain of HMS Pandora, [1] the frigate which the Admiralty sent to the South Pacific in pursuit of the Bounty mutineers.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea is a 1961 American science fiction disaster film, produced and directed by Irwin Allen, and starring Walter Pidgeon and Robert Sterling. The supporting cast includes Peter Lorre, Joan Fontaine, Barbara Eden, Michael Ansara, and Frankie Avalon. The film's storyline was written by Irwin Allen and Charles Bennett.
USS Macon (CA-132), a Baltimore-class heavy cruiser of the United States Navy, was laid down on 14 June 1943 by the New York Shipbuilding Corp., Camden, New Jersey; launched on 15 October 1944; sponsored by Mrs. Charles F. Bowden, wife of the mayor of Macon, Georgia; and commissioned on 26 August 1945 at Philadelphia, Captain Edward Everett Pare in command.
On February 28, 1847, sixteen Mill Creek men petitioned US Army captain Edward Kern for assistance against local Indians so that they would not "be forced to abandon our farms and leave our property perhaps something worse." [7] Captain Kern quickly marched up the valley with twenty men to "chastise" the Indians. There he met up with Sutter ...
SS Commodore was an American steamboat that was wrecked off the coast of Florida on 2 January 1897, while en route to Cuba. The event was immortalized when passenger and author Stephen Crane , who was traveling as a war correspondent for the Bacheller-Johnson syndicate, wrote the classic short story " The Open Boat " about his experience.