Event class: college, staff, army, war, school, officer, command, course, naval, promoted
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Donald B. Beary | He then served on the staff of the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1936. |
Warren Chaney | In October 1967, he was reassigned to the United States Department of the Army's Academy of Health Science at Fort Sam Houston. |
Ryusaku Yanagimoto | After attending advanced gunnery school, he was appointed chief gunnery officer on the'' Asakaze'' in 1923. |
Takeji Nara | After the war, he returned to the Army Staff College, graduating from the 13th class in December 1899. |
Ray Boland | After serving with the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood, Boland attended the United States Army Command and General Staff College, graduating in 1975. |
Orris E. Kelly | During this period he attended the Associate Command and General Staff College, graduating in 1959. |
Frank Hassett | before returning to Australia in July 1952, where he was posted as the director of military art at the Royal Military College, Duntroon. |
Mike Jackson | He was persuaded to try again the next year and was promoted to brigadier on 31 December 1989, after spending six months on a Service Fellowship writing a paper on the future of the Army and taking the Higher Command and Staff Course. |
George V. Underwood, Jr. | He attended the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in 1941. |
Lunsford E. Oliver | In 1928, he attended the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas for further military education. |
Hideo Iwakuro | He returned to mainland Japan in 1926 to attend the 38th class of the Army War College (Japan), and it was shortly after graduation that he became a member of the Sakura Kai ultranationalist secret society. |
George E. Leach | He graduated from the United States Army Command and General Staff College in 1916. |
John F. G. Howe | On his return from Germany in 1975 he attended the Royal College of Defence Studies for ten months and was posted to RAF Bentley Priory as' Operations Staff Officer (Training)' at Headquarters 11 Group, Strike Command. |
Harrison Lobdell, Jr. | In August 1958 he was assigned as a student at the Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kan. |
Duan Qirui | In 1906 he was appointed as the director of the Baoding Staff College, which allowed him to begin recruiting his own clique of loyal junior officers. |
Voltaire Gazmin | He would take the Command and General Staff Course at the U. S. Army Command and General Staff College in 1985. |
Troy H. Middleton | After two years as an instructor, and a promotion to major on 1 July 1920, Middleton prevailed upon his commanders to be allowed to enroll in the advanced infantry course as a student. |
William A. Knowlton | Following the war, he held a various staff postings, and graduated from the Command and General Staff College in 1955. |
Arvydas Pocius | Pocius joined Command and General Staff Course, Bundeswehr Command Academy (Germany) in 1996. |
Pierre R. Graham | In 1966, he was detailed to the National War College. |
Richard Rossmanith | Following company command, Rossmanith attended the Command and General and Staff Officers' Course in Hamburg, from which he graduated in 1987. |
Robert Milchrist Cannon | In 1938 Cannon graduated from the Army Command and General Staff College. |
Pavel Batov | He was given command of a company in 1926, and was chosen to attend the Vystrel Officer's School the same year, where he met many future senior officers of the wartime Red Army. |
Duane D. Thiessen | Upon returning to the United States in 1988, Major Thiessen attended the Naval Command and Staff College in Newport, Rhode Island. |
Mike Jackson | In 1976, he was promoted to major and attended the Staff College, Camberley, before being posted to Germany as chief of staff to the Berlin Infantry Brigade. |
Jacob L. Devers | For his next assignment in December, 1912, Devers was sent back to West Point to teach mathematics. |
Harold Geiger | Geiger completed courses at the U. S. Army Balloon School in April 1917, and later during World War I served overseas with the Army's Balloon Section Headquarters in France as a lieutenant colonel. |
Andrew C. Tychsen | On August 1, 1935 Tychsen was promoted to the rank of Major and was detached to the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas. |
Edward Wolfe (RAF officer) | In August 1943, Wolfe was sent to Orlando, Florida, for a short course at the United States Air Force Staff College, being followed by six weeks at the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas where he gained a Diploma. |
Scott Brown | He joined the Massachusetts Army National Guard when he was 19, receiving his basic training at Fort Dix, New Jersey, He was trained in infantry, quartermaster, and airborne duties, and in 1994 he joined the Judge Advocate General's Corps (JAG). |
Anthony Shaw | He attended the National Defence College in 1973. |
Robert Miller Montague | In 1933 Montague graduated from the Field Artillery Advanced Course. |
Rufus S. Bratton | In 1919, Bratton returned to West Point as an instructor until reassigned to Fort Benning to teach infantrymen, Bratton himself being a member of the Infantry Branch. |
Jarvis Lynch | On his return to the states in August 1963, he served for two years as the Senior Tactics instructor and Chief Instructor of the 2d Infantry Training Regiment, Camp Pendleton, California. |
Martin H. Foery | He was also a 1952 graduate of the United States Army Command and General Staff College. |
George Kenney | Commissioned into the Regular Army in 1920, he attended the Air Corps Tactical School, and later became an instructor there. |
Ray Funnell | He attended the Royal College of Defence Studies, London, in 1981 and the following year was appointed Director-General of the Military Staff Branch in the Department of Defence, Canberra. |
Robert Leahy Fair | In August 1952, he attended the Infantry Officers' Advanced Course at Fort Benning, Georgia. |
Samir El-Khadem | In 1982, he was delegated by Army Command to follow Advanced Naval Command and Staff Studies in France for two years. |
Marc H. Sasseville | In 2004 he attended the Air War College and took a course in correspondence. |
Raymond T. Odierno | Odierno graduated from the Naval War College in 1990 as a Major, where he learned the importance of becoming a strategic thinker and leader. |
Redmond Watt | He passed through the Staff College, Camberley in 1982, and also completed the Higher Command and Staff Course. |
John R. Guthrie | He was integrated into the Regular Army in July 1946, while on duty with the War Department General Staff. |
Emilio S. Liwanag | At Fort William McKinley, he studied in the Advanced Infantry Gunnery Course (artillery) in 1950 before his deployment to Korea under the Philippine Army. |
Galen B. Jackman | In 1983, Jackman graduated after attending the US Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas after nearly a year of study. |
Maung Maung Ta | In 1950, 2/Lt Maung Mg Ta attended Staff College Regimental Course with senior staff and infantry captains and stood first in administration and third in the exam. |
Ry?kichi Tanaka | After graduating from the 34th class of the Army Staff College in 1923, Tanaka served in various staff positions in the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff, and came into contact with Pan-Asianism theorist and nationalist writer Shūmei Ōkawa. |
La Vern E. Weber | In 1955 he graduated from the United States Army Command and General Staff College and was assigned as Intelligence Officer (G2) of the 45th Infantry Division. |
Jonathan O. Seaman | After a teaching assignment at West Point in 1939, he was promoted to captain with the 4th Field Artillery at Fort Bragg. |
Tin Oo | He was then transferred to Army Officer Training School as Commandant on 13 September 1957. |
Theodore E. Chandler | In October 1930, he began another series of shore assignments, reporting initially to the Bureau of Ordnance and then to the Army Industrial College before rounding out duty ashore with a brief tour in the office of the Chief of Naval Operations. |
Torashir? Kawabe | After three years, Kawabe was stationed in Moscow as a military attaché until 1934, when he was sent to the Kwantung Army as a staff officer and chief of its intelligence section. |
Thomas V. Draude | He was then assigned to the National War College as a student, graduating in 1982. |
Elly Tumwine | He also attended the Senior Command Course at the Uganda Senior Command and Staff College at Kimaka, in Jinja, Uganda, being a member of the pioneer class that graduated in 2005. |
John D. Altenburg | He was awarded a Master's Degree in Military Art and Science by the U. S. Army Command and General Staff College in 1986, in conjunction with his completion of the Command and General Staff Officer Course. |
Bennett Landreneau | In 1995, he graduated from the United States Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. |
Prince Kan'in Haruhito | Following a course in the Military Staff College in 1927, he was promoted to captain and joined the faculty of the Cavalry School. |
James L. Day | He was promoted to major in August 1962 and attended the Amphibious Warfare School, also at Quantico. |
Adriel N. Williams | He graduated from the National War College in Washington, D. C., in 1959. |
Victor Goddard | He returned to England in 1931 as chief instructor of the officers' engineering course. |
Roman Jarymowycz | Perhaps his most important appointment came in 1982 when he became an instructor for the Militia Command Staff Course at the Canadian Land Force Command and Staff College at CFB Kingston. |
Larry Snook | In early 1968 Snook returned from Vietnam and attended the UH-1 Instructor Pilot Course and was assigned as the deputy Huey branch chief, instructing UH-1 contact course at Fort Rucker, Alabama. |
Robert Nairac | Following completion of several training courses, he returned to Northern Ireland in 1974 attached to 4 Field Survey Troop, Royal Engineers, one of the three sub-units of a Special Duties unit known as 14 Intelligence Company (14 Int). |
Joyce Kilmer | Kilmer sought more hazardous duty and was transferred to the military intelligence section of his regiment, in April 1918. |
Walter Krueger | He attended the Army War College, graduating in 1921, and remaining for a year as an instructor, where he taught such classes as the'' Art of Command''. |
Pelagio A. Cruz | Cruz then entered the Command General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, United States in September 1951. |
Jack Broome | In 1938, he attended a staff course at the Royal Naval College at Greenwich. |
Andrzej Karweta | In following years he attended further studies, including Defence Politics at the Polish National Defence University in Warsaw (2006) and studies at Royal College of Defence Studies in London. |
Edward Preston Young | Returning to port on Christmas Day 1942, Young received a signal ordering him to return to the United Kingdom to attend the Commanding Officer's Qualifying Course (COQC). |
E. L. M. Burns | In 1939, as a Lt-Col, he attended the Imperial Defence College in London, England. |
Abdul Razak Bin Haji Mohd Yusof | He successfully completed his studies up to the STPM in Sultan Abdul Hamid College with Five Principles achievement and studied at Defence Forces University fir an Advanced Diploma - Strategic Defense expected to be passed in June 2010. |
William P. Yarborough | In January 1961, he was appointed commander/commandant of the US Army Special Warfare Center/School for Special Warfare at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. |
Hayk Bzhishkyan | In 1926, he continued his studies at the Military Academy of the General Staff. |
Akintunde Aduwo | Aduwo went for a course at the Indian National Defence College, and in 1977 was promoted Commodore and appointed Flag Officer Commanding the Nigerian Naval Flotilla. |
Hisaichi Terauchi | After the war, Terauchi returned to the Army Staff College and graduated from the 21st class in 1909. |
Mohammad Jamhour | In 1964, he graduated from the United States Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth Kansas USA. |
Vagharshak Harutiunyan | Harutiunyan than graduatated from the Naval Academy of the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union in 1991. |
J. H. Binford Peay III | Beginning in July 1988, he served a one year assignment as Deputy Commandant, Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas |
Francis Greenlief | He graduated from the United States Army Command and General Staff College in 1955. |
Vicente Rojo Lluch | In August 1932, he left the Academy to enter the Superior War School with the objective to make the course of the General Staff. |
Mikhail Malinin | Malinin was assigned as an instructor to the Leningrad Armored Forces Commanders' Course at December 1937. |
Edward Loch, 2nd Baron Loch | On 22 January 1908 he began the staff course at Staff College, Camberley, and he was promoted substantive major on 15 August 1908. |
Paul L. Freeman, Jr. | Returning from the war, he attended the National War College, graduating in 1952. |
John Humphrey Davidson | In 1912 he was transferred back to the Staff College, this time as an instructor. |
Patrick M. Hughes | Hughes attended the Army Intelligence - Officer Advanced Course, Fort Huachuca, Arizona, graduating in June 1973. |
Mikhail Diterikhs | After the end of the war he returned to Moscow, and in 1906 was chief officer for special duties at the 7th Army Corps headquarters. |
Ry?kichi Tanaka | At the end of 1940, Tanaka was recalled back to Japan, and the following year became Commandant of the Nakano School, the primary espionage and sabotage training facility for the Japanese army. |
Charles O'Neill (musician) | In 1908 he returned to England to receive training as a bandmaster for at the Royal Military School of Music at Kneller Hall through the support of the Canadian Department of National Defence. |
John M. Stotsenburg | After graduating from the Infantry and Cavalry School of Application at Fort Leavenworth, he was appointed a Professor of Military Science and Tactics at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in December 1897. |
Lawrence Lee | He was transferred to the Army Educational Service in Italy in February 1945, maintaining his rank of Lieutenant, and ran courses in art and culture. |
James E. Briggs | After serving next in several command and staff positions with the 1st Pursuit Group, Selfridge Field, Michigan, Captain Brings turned in 1940 to the U. S. Military Academy where he spent the next two years as a member of the faculty in the Department of Mathematics. |
Frederick Bieber | In 2001 Bieber received a Direct Presidential Commission as a Captain (O-3) in the Medical Service Corps of the United States Army Reserve and completed officer basic training at Fort Sam Houston and Camp Bullis in San Antonio, Texas. |
Edmund L. Gruber | His next assignment was to the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, as an instructor in the Department of Tactics, in which capacity he served until August 1917. |
Alan Morrison (general) | Morrison was promoted to brigadier in 1974, and attended the Royal College of Defence Studies, England. |
Nigel Poett | Upon his return from Woking, Poett was transferred to the War Office, and by early 1941 he had been promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and became the General Staff Officer Grade 1 in charge of the Staff Duties 2 branch of the War Office. |
Herbert T. Perrin | After service at various infantry posts, he attended the United States Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas in 1933. |
John P. Lucas | He then entered the one-year program at the U. S. Army Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, graduating in 1924 and finishing 78th out of 247 in his class. |
Ray Boland | He remained in that position until 1980, when he began attending the United States Army War College, graduating the following year. |
Charles S. Farnsworth | He graduated from the Army War College in 1916. |
Oscar F. Peatross | Promoted to Major, he attended the Command and Staff School at Quantico in 1944. |