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  1. 7 de abr. de 2015 · Allen Tupper Brown (1916-1944), the son of Clifton Stevenson Brown and Katherine Boyce Tupper, was born in 1916 and was twelve when his father was murdered in 1928. After his widowed mother met George Marshall, Allen was not initially enthusiastic. His mother recounts. The next summer I told my sons that I had asked Colonel Marshall to visit us ...

  2. September 15, 1927, Marshall's wife, Lily, tragically died after their 26 years of marriage. While attending a friend's dinner party two years later, Marshall met Katherine Boyce Tupper Brown, a former actress and widow from Baltimore.

  3. 7 de abr. de 2021 · Lights, Camera, Katherine! Katherine Tupper married George C. Marshall in 1930, but her early life took a very different route – a life on the road and on the stage. Yes, Katherine was once a celebrity actress! After graduating from the Hollins Institute, Katherine set her sights on the New York stage and enrolled in the American Academy of ...

  4. Husband of Katherine Boyce Tupper Brown (b-1884 Ky) In 1930, Marshall married Katherine Boyce Tupper (October 8, 1882 – December 18, 1978); John J. Pershing served as best man. Katherine Tupper was the mother of three children with Baltimore lawyer Clifton Stevenson Brown, who had been murdered by a disgruntled client in 1928.

  5. In 1920, Marshall was made a permanent major; in 1923, he became a permanent lieutenant colonel. From 1924 to 1927, he led the 15th Infantry in China, and then was an instructor at the Army War College. He then served as assistant commandant of the Infantry School until 1932. In 1930, he married Katherine Boyce Tupper Brown.

  6. Katherine Boyce Marshall was an actress, writer, and wife of soldier and statesman George C. Marshall.

  7. While at Fort Benning, in October 1930, Marshall courted and married Katherine Boyce Tupper Brown, a Baltimore widow with three young children. His subsequent assignments with the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in Georgia and South Carolina in 1932 and 1933 gave Marshall a window into the character and ability of young American men who would serve in his citizen army in the coming war.