
Neil Ritchie
@NeilRitchie86
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Editor: https://t.co/h1aOfGX3ok and https://t.co/TYSmMNstyl • Military & Defence Matters • Military History • Scottish History • D850 user @NRitchiePhoto
Ayrshire
Joined February 2012
The Royal Navy’s Flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth sailing past Cloch Point inbound for the Northern Ammunition Jetty at Glen Mallan on Loch Long today.
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RT @NeilRitchie86: Fokker F.XXIIs of No. 1 Air Observer and Navigation School getting loaded at Prestwick, Ayrshire. The aircraft were used….
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28 December 1745: Field Marshal Wade dispatched eight infantry battalions from Newcastle to reinforce Edinburgh after receiving a copy of the resolutions of the Council of War held by Lieutenant-General Joshua Guest at Edinburgh Castle on Christmas Day. RA CP/MAIN/8 f.143-143b
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28 December 1745: Six 18-pounder guns began the bombardment of Carlisle Castle under the direction of Major William Belford. Cumberland reported to Marshal Wade that the foundry of Whitehaven could not keep up the supply of shot as fast as they were using them.
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RT @BBCJamesCook: BREAKING Major incident declared by Highland Council because of “miles of vehicles” stuck in the snow on the A9 between D….
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Fokker F.XXIIs of No. 1 Air Observer and Navigation School getting loaded at Prestwick, Ayrshire. The aircraft were used to drop food supplies to army camps in southwest Scotland which were cut off by snow drifts during the severe winter of 1939-40.
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RT @NeilRitchie86: On 24 December 1724, Westmeath-born Major-General George Wade, MP for Bath, was appointed Commander-in-Chief, Scotland f….
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On 24 December 1724, Westmeath-born Major-General George Wade, MP for Bath, was appointed Commander-in-Chief, Scotland following his investigation and intelligence report on the situation in the Highlands. He took over from Lieutenant-General George Carpenter.
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23 December 1745: Government highlanders commanded by Norman MacLeod of Dunvegan were defeated by a numerically superior Jacobite force led by Lord Lewis Gordon at Inverurie. Gordon's Jacobite force was predominantly lowlanders along with regular soldiers from the Royal Ecossais.
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RT @rblackqc: First it was Moussa Koussa who was supposedly holding the key to #Lockerbie. Now it’s Abdullah Senussi. By now there is enoug….
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RT @DavieTait: "Former CIA operations officer John Holt, the one-time handler of Giaka, agrees. "I have no doubt it was Iran," he says, ad….
news.sky.com
A new Sky documentary tells the story of Britain's deadliest terrorist atrocity and the most fatal terrorist attack on America before 9/11: the bombing of Pan Am flight 103, when 270 people lost...
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RT @Jefferson_MFG: NEW FACILITY: BAE Systems is building a new assembly hall at its Govan shipyard as part of a wider £300 million investm….
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RT @Nadair_Thiriodh: Took this photo yday when the wind was starting to get up. Tomorrow's looking a shocker. However, I have the @KellyKet….
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20 December 1745: The Earl of Loudoun dispatched a force of pro-Hanoverian highlanders from Inverness under Norman MacLeod of Dunvegan, George Munro of Culcairn, and James Grant of Grant to confront Lord Lewis Gordon and his Jacobite forces at Aberdeen.
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18 December 1745: As Charles Edward Stuart's army continued its withdrawal back to Scotland, Jacobite forces under Lord George Murray fought a rearguard action against pursuing government dragoons commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Philip Honeywood at Clifton, south of Penrith.
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RMS Empress of Britain arriving at Greenock on 17 December 1939 with the first Canadian soldiers to arrive in Britain. The vessel was one of four liners of Canadian troop convoy TC.1. In the background is the battlecruiser HMS Hood that escorted TC.1.
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RT @NeilRitchie86: 16 December 1745: Lieutenant-General John Murray, Earl of Dunmore commanding British and British-paid troops in Flanders….
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16 December 1745: Lieutenant-General John Murray, Earl of Dunmore commanding British and British-paid troops in Flanders was informed by William Stanhope, Earl of Harrington that the hired Hessian force of 6,000 would sail to Scotland and that transport ships were being readied.
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