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  1. Charles Pearre Cabell (October 11, 1903 – May 25, 1971) was a United States Air Force general and Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (1953–1962). Early life. Charles P. Cabell was born in Dallas, Texas on October 11, 1903, the son of Ben E. (son of Confederate general William L. Cabell) and Sadie E. (Pearre) Cabell.

  2. brigadier general charles p. cabell jr. Brig. Gen. Charles P. Cabell Jr. is the commandant, Defense Systems Management College, Fort Belvoir, Va. General Cabell was born in San Antonio, Texas, in 1936, and graduated from Gonzaga High School, Washington, D.C., in 1953.

  3. Commander, Order SS Maurice and Lazarous (Italy) Charles Pearre Cabell was born in Dallas, Texas, in 1903. He graduated from the U.S. Military Academy June 12, 1925, and was commissioned a second lieutenant of Field Artillery. For five years following his graduation from the academy, Lieutenant Cabell,

  4. 23 de oct. de 1999 · In the 3 years before his death, General Charles P. Cabell, the CIA's longest serving DDCI (under DCI Allen Dulles), wrote his memoirs. For family reasons which his son explains in his preface, they were not published until 1997 and have only recently come to AFIO's attention.

  5. Late in the afternoon of April 16, hours before the invasion and the air strikes were to begin, the CIA deputy director, Gen. Charles P. Cabell, stopped by the command post in Washington on his way home from playing golf. Cabell, like Stevenson, had not been told much, but with Dulles out of town, he was officially in charge.

  6. Cabell, a 1925 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, was an officer almost 37 years, serv- ing with the CIA from 1953 until his retirement in 1962. Gen. Cabell was born in Dal- las, Tex. After flight training at Kelly Field, Tex., he was sta- tioned -in the Panama Canal Zone in the early 1930s.

  7. Charles Pearre Cabell led the most successful military career of any of his kinsmen. He graduated from West Point in 1925 and served initially with the 12th Field Artillery. He reoriented his career from the land to the air in 1931, however, when he completed Advanced Flying School in 1931 at Kelly Field, Texas.