Victory meant independence from control by Great Britain. It also began, eventually, the emergence of the United States of America. Thankfully, the USA and Great Britain are friends now!
Andrew Jackson
i think it's the planting of victory gardens
The Battle of The Cedars was fought between Great Britain and the United Colonies. Great Britain won a tactical victory, however the battle ended up having no strategic consequences.
James Jerome Hill (September 1838 to May 1916) was the chief executive officer of the Great Northern Railway. He became known as "The Empire Builder" due to the size of his railways stretching between the Upper Northwest, Northern Great Plains and Pacific Northwest.
Admiral Frank B. Kelso was a great Navy Admiral and a great man.
As I recall reading somewhere, that would be Christopher Columbus. Admiral Nelson of the British Navy was also called the great admiral, but he was not an explorer.
a great success or victory
Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, who died from wounds at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, stans on top of the column in Trafalgar Square.
There should be only ONE battleship moored/emplaced in Great Britain, the "WOODEN" warship HMS Victory; Admiral Horatio Nelson's flagship from the 1805 Battle of Trafalgar. There is a steel battleship moored/emplaced in Japan, Admiral Togo's flagship from the 1905 Battle of Tsushima.
what great victory has Caesar just accomplished
Pyrrhic victory.
Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans and Rear Admiral Charles S. Sperry
A victory at great cost, outweighing the benefits.
The second Battle of El Alamein was a great victory for the Allies.
The speaker probably meant a Pyrrhic victory: a victory won, but at too great of a cost.
Admiral William Halsey Leadership Academy's motto is 'There are no great men. There are only great challenges that ordinary men like you and me are forced by circumstances to meet.'.