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      • Thomas Newton Jr. (November 21, 1768 – August 5, 1847) was an American politician.
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  1. LIEUTENANT GENERAL RICHARD Y. NEWTON III. Lt. Gen. Dick Newton is Assistant Vice Chief of Staff and Director, Air Staff, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C. He oversees the administration and organization of the Air Staff, which develops policies, plans and programs; establishes requirements; and provides resources to support the Air ...

  2. Mar 9, 2020 · General Newton’s career spanned a board range of assignments, ultimately retiring as the Assistant Vice Chief of Staff and Director for the Air Staff at the U.S. Air Force Headquarters.

  3. Nov 15, 2021 · Newton and his wife, Elouise (Morning) Newton, live in Bluffton, South Carolina. They have five children, Lloyd Newton, Jr., Edward Morning, Cheryl Colbert, James Morning, and Lori Newton. General Lloyd W. “Fig” Newton was interviewed by The HistoryMakers on November 15, 2021.

  4. May 3, 2012 · Newton had served as the Air Force's assistant vice chief of staff since December 2010. With his retirement, Lt. Gen. Frank Gorenc is the new assistant vice chief of staff, overseeing the administration and organization of the Air Staff at the Pentagon.

    • Early Life & Career
    • Antebellum Years
    • The Civil War Begins
    • Courting Controversy
    • Ordered West
    • Later Life

    Born at Norfolk, VA on August 25, 1822, John Newton was the son of Congressman Thomas Newton, Jr., who represented the city for thirty-one years, and his second wife Margaret Jordan Pool Newton. After attending schools in Norfolk and receiving additional instruction in mathematics from a tutor, Newton elected to pursue a military career and obtaine...

    Continuing to oversee these types of projects, Newton married Anna Morgan Starr of New London on October 24, 1848. The coupled would ultimately have 11 children. Four years later, he received a promotion to first lieutenant. Named to a board tasked with assessing the defenses on the Gulf Coast in 1856, he was promoted to captain on July 1 of that y...

    Made Chief Engineer of the Department of Pennsylvania, Newton first saw combat during the Union victory at Hoke's Run (VA) on July 2, 1861. After briefly serving as Chief Engineer of the Department of the Shenandoah, he arrived in Washington, DC in August and aided in constructing defenses around the city and across the Potomac in Alexandria. Promo...

    Newton was in this role when the army, with Major General Ambrose Burnside at the head, opened the Battle of Fredericksburgon December 13. Positioned towards the southern end of the Union line, VI Corps was largely idle during the fighting. One of several generals who was unhappy with Burnside's leadership, Newton traveled to Washington with one of...

    Sent west, Newton assumed command of a division in IV Corps. Serving in Thomas' Army of the Cumberland, he took part in Major General William T. Sherman's advance on Atlanta. Seeing combat throughout the campaign at places such as Resaca and Kennesaw Mountain, Newton's division distinguished itself at Peachtree Creek on July 20 when it blocked mult...

    Coming north in the spring of 1866, Newton spent the better part of the next two decades engaged in a variety of engineering and fortification projects in New York. On March 6, 1884, he was promoted to brigadier general and made Chief of Engineers, succeeding Brigadier General Horatio Wright. In this post two years, he retired from the US Army on A...

  5. 3 days ago · John Newton Jr. was a leader, a mentor, and a strong advocate for bringing more Black and minority firefighters into the department. ... He would later serve as Grand Commander General of the ...

  6. Lloyd W. "Fig" Newton (born December 24, 1942) is a retired United States Air Force (USAF) four-star general who served as Commander, Air Education and Training Command (COMAETC) from 1997 to 2000. He was also the first African-American pilot in the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds.

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