Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn organization
also: Carter Ledyard Milburn, Carter Ledyard, Carter Ledger
Explore in graph → Export claims (CSV) ↓
Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Frank Wisnerperson · 5Gordon Grayperson · 3United Statescountry · 2James Ledyardperson · 2William J. Donovanperson · 2Tracy Barnesperson · 2R.J. Reynoldsorganization · 1American Expressorganization · 1Paul Nitzeperson · 1Chip Bolingperson · 1Bowman Grayperson · 1CIAintelligence service · 1
Claims (8)
Frank Wisner member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn documented
“at a private school and attended the University of Virginia. He graduated third in his class, bringing an immediate offer from a Wall Street firm. Wisner joined Carter Ledyard Milburn in 1934, located three floors above Donovan's law firm i…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4) @ 12:46
William Harding Jackson member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn documented
“All of them had worked in the same Wall Street law firm called Carter, Ledyard, and Milburn before World War II. Gray hired as his assistant in this psychological warfare area a guy by the name of Tracy Barnes, B-A-R-N-E-S.…”
▶ The Colonels corner president’s secret wars chapter 5 @ 36:14
Gordon Gray member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn host_asserted
“Gray was the son of Bowman Gray, a tobacco baron and chairman of R.J. Reynolds. Bowman's son could have gone anywhere but chose a state college. Yale Law followed and Gray worked a couple of years at Frank Wisner's Wall Street firm, Carter …”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (6) @ 42:27
Gordon Gray member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn host_asserted
“And its greatest claim to fame in 1905 was when it hired FDR. At Carter Ledyard, Frank Wisner labored for seven years, eventually becoming a partner. There he met other associates like William Jackson, Gordon Gray, and Tracy Barnes. Jackson…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4) @ 13:47
Tracy Barnes member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn host_asserted
“And its greatest claim to fame in 1905 was when it hired FDR. At Carter Ledyard, Frank Wisner labored for seven years, eventually becoming a partner. There he met other associates like William Jackson, Gordon Gray, and Tracy Barnes. Jackson…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4) @ 13:47
Gordon Gray member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn documented
“All of them had worked in the same Wall Street law firm called Carter, Ledyard, and Milburn before World War II. Gray hired as his assistant in this psychological warfare area a guy by the name of Tracy Barnes, B-A-R-N-E-S.…”
▶ The Colonels corner president’s secret wars chapter 5 @ 36:14
Frank Wisner member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn documented
“All of them had worked in the same Wall Street law firm called Carter, Ledyard, and Milburn before World War II. Gray hired as his assistant in this psychological warfare area a guy by the name of Tracy Barnes, B-A-R-N-E-S.…”
▶ The Colonels corner president’s secret wars chapter 5 @ 36:14
James Ledyard member_of
Carter, Lanyard, and Milburn host_asserted
“James Ledyard did essentially the same work as Donovan's law firm. Even older than Sullivan and Cromwell, the firm had been founded in 1854 by lawyers from New York City and Buffalo, New York. James Carter, the Buffalo counsel, left after a…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4) @ 13:18
Mentions (7)
▶ 14:45
At the time, he was 39 years old. He was from Mississippi. He had been serving as a deputy assistant secretary of state for, quote unquote, occupied areas. And basically, a University of Virginia Law School graduate. He was a Wall Street la…
▶ 36:14
All of them had worked in the same Wall Street law firm called Carter, Ledyard, and Milburn before World War II. Gray hired as his assistant in this psychological warfare area a guy by the name of Tracy Barnes, B-A-R-N-E-S.…
▶ 12:46
at a private school and attended the University of Virginia. He graduated third in his class, bringing an immediate offer from a Wall Street firm. Wisner joined Carter Ledyard Milburn in 1934, located three floors above Donovan's law firm i…
▶ 13:18
James Ledyard did essentially the same work as Donovan's law firm. Even older than Sullivan and Cromwell, the firm had been founded in 1854 by lawyers from New York City and Buffalo, New York. James Carter, the Buffalo counsel, left after a…
▶ 13:47
And its greatest claim to fame in 1905 was when it hired FDR. At Carter Ledyard, Frank Wisner labored for seven years, eventually becoming a partner. There he met other associates like William Jackson, Gordon Gray, and Tracy Barnes. Jackson…
▶ 18:14
Early on, he made a tour of the displaced persons camp in Germany. The posted state was one in which Wisner could exercise his expertise on Eastern Europe. Not coincidentally, his immediate boss had been a Carter Ledger client. Weird. Such …
▶ 42:27
Gray was the son of Bowman Gray, a tobacco baron and chairman of R.J. Reynolds. Bowman's son could have gone anywhere but chose a state college. Yale Law followed and Gray worked a couple of years at Frank Wisner's Wall Street firm, Carter …