Lawrence Whitfield Major

Lawrence Whitfield Major MBE QPM CPM was a senior naval officer in the Bahamas.[1][2][3] Whitfield joined the Bahamas' police force in 1950. In 1971, when the Police force created a Police Marine Division, Major was put in charge. During his career Major held other senior positions within Bahamas Ministry of Security. When Major retired from the Police he was an assistant commissioner. He was then appointed Warden of the Bahamas main prison.

Lawrence Whitfield Major

MBE QPM CPM
BornMarch 19,1933
Moss Town, Exuma,Bahamas
DiedFebruary, 2008
NationalityBahamian
Spouse(s)Stella Major m.1952
Children16 children (10 living)

Early life and family

Major was born on the 19th of March 1933 to Lloyd Major and Lilly Major in Moss Town, Exuma,Bahamas.

Legacy

In 1979 Major was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire.[2] In 2016 the Royal Bahamas Defence Force, the agency that evolved from the Police Marine Division that Major commanded, commissioned the HMBS Lawrence Major.[1]

gollark: Yeeees.
gollark: It is *annoying* that despite being several thousand to million times faster than old stuff, my laptop is still not notably faster on general-purpose tasks.
gollark: Reject modern computers, return to bare-metal BASIC on 16-bit machines or something.
gollark: It does have a GPU now, though, as I wanted to run GPT-2 slightly faster and was able to obtain a bad one which technically supports CUDA.
gollark: My server is only mildly more powerful than my laptop and has half the RAM, so mostly I just suffer.

References

  1. "HMBS Lawrence W. Major arrives in Nassau". Stronger Bahamas. December 4, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2016. Dr. Nottage reflected on the many contributions of the late Lawrence Major, calling the man in whose honour the vessel was named a great Bahamian son, a man for all seasons, and a career and esteemed public servant.
  2. Ricardo Wells (March 18, 2016). "Defence Force Bolsters Fleet With Three New Vessels, Mobile Base". Bahamas Tribune. Retrieved March 18, 2016. The HMBS Lawrence Major was named in honour of the late Lawrence Whitfield Major, a lifelong seaman turned maritime law enforcement officer. Mr Major joined the Royal Bahamas Police Force in 1950 and became a well-respected public servant, eventually taking charge of the newly formed Police Marine Division in 1971, which later became the Royal Bahamas Defence Force.
  3. Michael Craton, Gail Saunders (2000). A History of the Bahamian People: From the Ending of Slavery to the Twenty-First Century. University of Georgia Press. pp. 376, 381, 421. ISBN 978-0-8203-2284-1.


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