Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Lieutenant General Sir David Henderson, KCB, KCVO, DSO (11 August 1862 – 17 August 1921) was the senior leader of British military aviation during the First World War, having previously established himself as the leading authority on tactical intelligence in the British Army. He served as the commander of the Royal Flying Corps in the field ...

    • 1883–1919
  2. Lieutenant General Sir David Henderson KCB, KCVO, DSO, LLD (11 August 1862 – 17 August 1921) was an officer in the British Army who came to be considered as the leading authority on tactical intelligence during the early years of the 20th century. Henderson was also the first commander of the Royal Flying Corps in the field and was instrumental in establishing the Royal Air Force as an ...

  3. Lieutenant General Sir David Henderson KCB, KCVO, DSO, LLD (11 August 1862 - 17 August 1921) was an officer in the British Army who came to be considered as the leading authority on tactical intelligence during the early years of the 20th century.

  4. Lieutenant General Sir David Henderson, KCB, KCVO, DSO (11 August 1862 – 17 August 1921) was the senior leader of British military aviation during the First World War, having previously established himself as the leading authority on tactical intelligence in the British Army. He served as the commander of the Royal Flying Corps in the field during the first year of the First World War and ...

  5. Media in category "David Henderson (British Army officer)" The following 10 files are in this category, out of 10 total. Brig-Gen David Henderson.jpg 631 × 1,005; 102 KB

  6. David Henderson (British Army officer) (1862–1921), senior British Army and, later, RAF officer; David Ezekiel Henderson (1879–1968), U.S. federal judge; David Henderson (poet) (born 1942), poet associated with the Umbra workshop and Black Arts Movement; Davy Henderson (born c. 1962), Scottish musician, The Fire Engines, Win, The Nectarine ...

  7. By the end of the war the intelligence element of the British Forces had increased from 2 officers to 132 officers and 2321 soldiers. Hume's recommendations were implemented by Lieutenant Colonel David Henderson, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, the author of 'Field Intelligence, Its Principles and Practice' (1904), a manual that described ...