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On 19 March 1988, the British Army corporals Derek Wood and David Howes [1] were killed by the Provisional IRA in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in what became known as the corporals killings. Wearing civilian clothes, both armed with Browning Hi-Power pistols and in a civilian car, the soldiers drove into the funeral procession of an IRA member ...
A depiction of a man tied on a flogging ladder from a 1 August 1846 report on White's flogging. Frederick John White was a private in the British Army's 7th Hussars.While serving at the Cavalry Barracks, Hounslow, in 1846, White touched a sergeant with a metal bar during an argument while drunk.
Three people were killed and more than 60 wounded. The "unprecedented, one-man attack" [2] was filmed by television news crews and caused shock around the world. [3] Three days later, two British Army corporals drove into the funeral procession of one of the Milltown victims.
Bryan James Budd, VC (16 July 1977 – 20 August 2006) was a British Army soldier and a Northern Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
Andrew Walker (1953/1954 – 3 September 2021) [1] was a British Army corporal in the Royal Scots who murdered three colleagues in a payroll robbery in the Pentland Hills, south of Edinburgh, in January 1985.
16 March - Milltown Cemetery attack: Three men are killed and 70 are wounded in a gun and grenade attack by loyalist paramilitary Michael Stone on mourners at Milltown Cemetery in Belfast during the funerals of the three IRA members killed in Gibraltar. 19 March - Corporals killings in Belfast: British Army corporals Woods and Howes are ...
The IRA expressed regret for the death and stated she had been shot "in the belief that she was a member of the British army garrison at Dortmund". [11] [12] On 28 October 1989, IRA members opened fire on the car [6] [13] of RAF corporal Mick Islania. The corporal had just returned to the car from a petrol station snack bar [14] in Wildenrath.
He died at the age of 27 while serving as a corporal with the 1st Battalion of the King's Shropshire Light Infantry (KSLI). [9] His death was reported in The Times on 1 January 1940 under the headline 'First British Soldier Killed in Action'. [2] Priday's younger brother Archibald served with the same battalion. [2] His family reside in ...