C B Hawley - meaning and definition. What is C B Hawley
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What (who) is C B Hawley - definition

BRITISH ARMY GENERAL
General Henry Hawley; Hangman Hawley; Hawley, Henry
  • Hawley fought in the 1707 [[Battle of Almanza]], an Allied defeat
  • Hawley's aide at Culloden, [[James Wolfe]], who later claimed to have been ordered to shoot Jacobite wounded after the battle
  • Falkirk Muir]], January 1746
  • Hawley was buried here in 1759
  • [[West Green House]], built by Hawley in 1720, using profits from the [[capture of Vigo]]

C. B. Hawley         
Charles Beach Hawley (Brookfield, Connecticut, February 14, 1858Noted in Hall, A Chronicle of American Music, p. 154 – Eatontown, New Jersey,"On the Death of C.
Florence M. Hawley         
ANTHROPOLOGIST
Dr. Florence Hawley; Florence Hawley Ellis; Florence Hawley
Florence May Hawley Ellis (née Florence May Hawley, also known as Florence Hawley Senter; September 17, 1906 – 1991) was one of the first anthropologists to work extensively on dendrochronology, or tree-ring dating. She conducted archaeological and ethnographic research in the Southwestern United States; and undertook some of the first dendrochronological research in eastern North America in the mid 20th century, examining samples from a number of archaeological sites.
Amos Hawley         
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGIST
Amos H. Hawley; Amos Henry Hawley
Amos Henry Hawley (December 5, 1910 – August 31, 2009) was an American sociologist. Hawley studied extensively how human populations interacted with their changing environments along with the growth of populations.

Wikipedia

Henry Hawley

Henry Hawley (12 January 1685 – 24 March 1759) was a British army officer who served in the wars of the first half of the 18th century. He fought in a number of significant battles, including the Capture of Vigo in 1719, Dettingen, Fontenoy and Culloden.

During the Jacobite rising of 1745, he was recalled to Britain and appointed commander in Scotland in December, replacing Sir John Cope. In January 1746, he was defeated at the Battle of Falkirk Muir, although it did not damage his career in the same way. The Duke of Cumberland took over and Hawley led the cavalry at Culloden in April, a victory that ended the Rising.

Although a courageous and capable commander of cavalry, Hawley was also a strict disciplinarian, referred to by contemporaries as 'Hangman Hawley' or 'Lord Chief Justice.' While this referred to his disciplinary methods, there is evidence he bears some responsibility for the killing of Jacobite wounded after Culloden. He returned to Flanders in July 1746, and when the War of the Austrian Succession ended in 1748, he was appointed Governor of Inverness; in 1752, he became Governor of Portsmouth, near his home in Hartley Wintney, where he died in March 1759.