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・ John Whitehead (diplomat)
・ John Whitehead (explorer)
・ John Whitehead (footballer)
・ John Whitehead (New Zealand)
・ John Whitehead (physician)
・ John Whitehead (singer)
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John Whitelaw (general, born 1894)
・ John Whitelaw (general, born 1921)
・ John Whitelaw (harpsichordist)
・ John Whitelegg
・ John Whiteley
・ John Whiteley (British Army officer)
・ John Whiteley (politician)
・ John Whitelocke
・ John Whitesell
・ John Whiteside
・ John Whiteside (cricketer)
・ John Whiteway
・ John Whitfield
・ John Whitfield (conductor)
・ John Whitfield (politician)


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John Whitelaw (general, born 1894) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Whitelaw (general, born 1894)

Major General John Stewart Whitelaw CB, CBE (26 August 1894 – 21 April 1964) was a senior officer in the Australian Army. Whitelaw was a graduate of the first intake of the Royal Military College, Duntroon and served briefly at Gallipoli with an infantry battalion during the First World War. His war service was, however, cut short by a bullet wound suffered during the landing on 25 April 1915 and he returned to Australia where, during the interwar years, he transferred to the artillery and undertook a number of staff and instructional postings. During the Second World War, although he did not serve overseas in an operational role, in his capacity as a senior artillery officer Whitelaw had responsibility for all matters relating to the development of artillery in the Australian Army and in this role he championed the introduction of new technologies and weaponry into the corps and the development of Australian defence industries.
Following the end of hostilities Whitelaw served as general officer commanding of the Army's Western Command as well presiding over the war crimes tribunals held at Rabaul, New Guinea in 1947. He retired from the military in 1951 with a number of high honours, nevertheless, however, he continued his links with the Army, and in 1955 he accepted the ceremonial role of Colonel Commandant of the Royal Australian Artillery, a post he held until 1961. He died in 1964, aged 69.
==Early life==
Whitelaw was born on 26 August 1894 at Hawthorn, Victoria. He was oldest of three children, born to ironmonger Thomas Whitelaw and his wife Margaret (née Hunter). In his formative years he attended Wesley College before being accepted into the first intake of the newly established Royal Military College, Duntroon where he undertook training to be commissioned as an officer in the Australian Army.〔Hughes (2002), pp. 538–539.〕

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