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Royal Scots Fusiliers officers

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Winston Churchill
Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill was a British statesman, military officer, and writer who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945, during the Second World War, and again from 1951 to 1955. For some 62 of the years between 1900 and 1964, he was a Member of Parliament (MP) and represented a total of five constituencies over that time. Ideologically an adherent to economic liberalism and imperialism, he was for most of his career a member of the Conservative Party, which he led from 1940 to 1955. He was a member of the Liberal Party from 1904 to 1924.
William Birdwood, 1st Baron Birdwood
British Field Marshal 1865–1951 (1865–1951)
Hugh Trenchard, 1st Viscount Trenchard
Royal Flying Corps commander and first Royal Air Force Chief of the Air Staff (1873-1956)
John Campbell, 4th Duke of Argyll
British Army general (1693-1770)
Thomas Gore Browne
British colonial administrator (1807-1887)
James Murray
British soldier
Frederick Adam
British Army general (1781 or 1784-1781)
Archibald Sinclair, 1st Viscount Thurso
British politician (1890-1970)
Sir Herbert Maxwell, 7th Baronet
British horticulturist and genealogist (1845-1937)
Deneys Reitz
South African politician (1882–1944)
William Maule, 1st Earl Panmure
Scottish soldier and politician
Sir Martin Lindsay, 1st Baronet
British politician (1905-1981)
Stanislas Saint Clair
Ottoman-British military officer of Scottish and Polish descent (1835–1887)
James Leith
British Army officer (1763–1816)
John Small
British Army general
Francis Fane, 12th Earl of Westmorland
English Earl (1825–1891)
Kenneth Strong
British Army general, later civil servant (1900-1982)
Edmund Hakewill-Smith
British Army general
Lord William Paulet
British Field Marshal (1804–1893)
Richard Carnac Temple
British commissioner (1850–1931)