They were all senior Union Generals.
Apart from that, nothing much. Scott, Halleck and Grant all occupied the post of General-in-Chief.
McClellan and Burnside both commanded the Army of the Potomac.
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Union generals McClellan, Burnside and Hooker were all graduates of West Point and all of them had been appointed by President Lincoln to lead the Army of the Potomac. Each of them had also been relieved of being commander of that same army. In order there was 1. McClellan 2. Burnside and 3. Hooker.
Although not generally reported to the men in the field by name, high ranking US officers believed that some NVA generals may have been killed during B-52 strikes. General Giap, one of the few NVA generals fairly common to most US servicemen, due to his reputation during the French War, as well as the siege at the Marine Corps base at Khe Sanh; definitely survived the war & definitely would have been reported as killed...if he had been.
Most likely all of them, except perhaps for Ludendorff in the beginning, before he became disenchanted with Hitler and Nazism. Although Hindenburg was forced into sharing power with Hitler, he had no liking for him, and described him as the most common little man he had ever known.
Trench Foot and Malaria were common.
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