Event class: retired, years, retirement, service, age, served, resigned, politics, due, army

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de-normalize

Events with high posterior probability

William S. Benson Benson retired from the Naval service in September 1919.
Daniel BrandensteinHe retired from NASA and the United States Navy in October 1992.
Edward Ellsberg He rose to the rank of Rear Admiral before he retired from active duty in 1951 to enjoy Maine and Florida with his wife of thirty three years.
Aftab Ghulam Nabi Kazi In 1994, A G N Kazi finally retired after fifty long years of service and never took up any regular government assignment.
Jonathan O. SeamanIn 1971, he retired to Beaufort, South Carolina after 37 years of active duty.
Nigel Thorpe Following his retirement from HM Diplomatic Service, Nigel Thorpe remained in Budapest until November 2008 as Chairman of Vodafone Hungary.
Jos? Toribio MerinoHe retired from the navy on the 8 of March 1990, after more than 50 years of service.
Dinsmore AlterDuring 1958 he reached mandatory retirement age, and was officially retired on March 31.
Edward SteptoeHe retired due to ill health in 1861, and died four years later.
Edward Loch, 2nd Baron Loch Loch retired from the army in 1922.
Terrance B. LettsomeHe retired in 1999 after 36 years of uninterrupted service to the 7th District.
Se?n MacEntee Following the 1965 general election MacEntee was 76 years old and retired from the government.
Leroy W. StutzColonel Stutz retired from the Air Force in June 1994, having completed 30 years on active duty.
Valston Hancock Hancock retired from the Air Force in May 1965 after completing his term as CAS, which the government had extended for twelve months beyond its original three years.
Arthur Grant DuffHe retired in 1927 after 42 years' service.
Charles L. MelsonMelson retired from the Navy in 1966 upon the conclusion of his college presidency.
David B. ThompsonThompson resigned from his post as Bishop on July 12, 1999, after nine years of service and surpassing the mandatory retirement age of 75.
John WingbladeWingblade retired from provincial politics at dissolution of the assembly in 1963.
Gilbert HighetHe stayed at Columbia until 1971 (except for British Army service during World War II).
Peter GrationFollowing forty-four years of service, Gration retired from the Australian Army and active military service in 1993.
Edith GuerrierEight years later, in 1940, Guerrier was reluctantly forced into retirement.
James Aloysius HickeyHe resigned as Archbishop on November 21, 2000, after twenty years of service.
Alfred NeedlerNeedler retired from the civil service in 1971 to return to St. Andrews.
Antonio BaldisseraIn 1908 he had to retire from the army under the age limit.
Joseph B. MurdockHe retired from the Navy after 43 years of service on 13 February 1913 at the mandatory retirement age of 62.
George MihalcheonMihalcheon retired from provincial politics at dissolution of the Assembly in 1930.
Earl HardyHardy retired from provincial politics at dissolution of the assembly in 1963.
Joseph M. ReevesHe retired again in December 1946 with the rank of full admiral.
Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleist Kleist was semi-retired when, in August 1939, he was recalled to active duty at the age of fifty-eight.
Jacob Zeilin Zeilin eventually retired from the Marine Corps on November 1, 1876 after serving over forty-five years as a Marine Corps officer.
Withers A. BurressIn November 1954, he retired from the U. S. Army after 38 years of active duty.
Trish Draper In June 2006, after the death of long serving staff member, and the sudden illness of her husband, Draper retired from Federal politics.
Tom Chambers (politician)Chambers retired from provincial politics at dissolution of the Assembly in 1986.
Alfred North WhiteheadIn 1910, due to a Cambridge byelaw limiting the term of a Senior Lecturer to twenty-five years, Whitehead was forced to retire.
Stevyn ColganHe retired from the police service in February 2010 after completing 30 years' service.
Robert MagnusHe officially retired on September 1, 2008 ; at the time of his retirement, he was the last active officer of the Corps who had served in the Vietnam War.
Werner SchmidtSchmidt retired from politics with the dissolution of parliament for the 2006 federal election.
Charles P. Snyder (admiral)He retired in August 1943 upon reaching the statutory age, and was advanced to admiral on the retired list as the highest rank in which he had served, but remained on active duty as inspector general until the end of the war.
Prince Fushimi HiroyasuHe remained a member of the Supreme War Council throughout the Pacific War, but officially retired from the active list in 1945.
Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl GranvilleHe went to the Colonial Office for six months, and in July 1886 retired from public life.
Aristotelis VlachopoulosHe finally retired in March 1928 after reaching the statutory age limit.
Dumitru PrunariuIn February 2007 he completely retired from the Ministry of Defense with the rank of a Major-General, continuing to work on the same positions as a civilian servant.
Luke McNameeHe left the post on May 29, 1934 after retiring from active duty.
John Cooper (British Army officer)He stepped down on 4 March 2009, and retired from the army later that year.
Garba DubaHe retired in 1993 after thirty-one years of active military service.
Robert V. KeeleyAt his retirement in 1989 Keeley held the rank of Career Minister.
Stan ArthurHe retired from active military service on 1 June 1995.
Hasegawa KatsutoshiHe reached the mandatory retirement age of 65 in July 2009.
David StancliffeAlthough he officially retired as of 13 July 2010, he continued in his duties at General Synod and completed his commitments as bishop and member of the House of Lords.
Edward RownyIn 1990, General Rowny retired from the Government after fifty years of Government service to become an international consultant on negotiations.
Robert B. JohnstonHe retired from the U. S. Marine Corps in 1995 after over 34 years of active duty service.
Rufus StephensonAfter he retired from federal politics, he served as customs collector at Chatham until his death in 1901.
J?nis FrancisIn 1935 he attained the maximum service age and was retired from the army.
Alejo PeyretHe requested retirement benefits on October 14, 1889, on the justification of his advanced age and poor health, naturalized Argentine citizenship, and physical infirmity after thirty-one years of service.
Charles E. WilhelmGeneral Wilhelm retired from the Marine Corps in 2000, after 37 years of service.
Carroll Thomas DozierAfter eleven years as bishop, Dozier resigned due to poor health on July 27, 1982.
Jay R. VargasAfter almost thirty years of service, Vargas retired from the Marine Corps in 1992 as a colonel.
Delos Bennett SackettHe served in the same role in a variety of posts until 1881, when he returned to Washington as a brigadier general and Senior Inspector General of the Army, a post he held until his death in Washington at the age of 63 of gangrene.
Louis CukelaHe finally returned to the inactive retired list on May 17, 1946.
Kenneth AdamHe remained in this role until 1968, when he reached the BBC's compulsory retirement age of sixty.
Bowman MalcolmHe retired from the NCC at the end of 1922, having completed 52 years service with the company, of which 46 years had been as Locomotive Superintendent.
Jinzabur? MasakiHe retired from active military service in 1936.
Sid McMathHe resumed his activity with the Marine Corps Reserve following his tenure as governor and commanded VTU 8 -- 14 in Little Rock until 1964.
Albert T. ChurchChurch served as on active duty for 36 years, retiring as a Vice Admiral in 2005.
Raymond P. RodgersRodgers retired from the Navy upon the conclusion of his college presidency on 20 November 1911.
Thomas W. HerrenHerren retired from the Army at Governors Island on July 31, 1957 after 40 years of active duty.
Bryan Robinson (judge)He retired to England in 1877 and was knighted in December of that year.
Benjamin R. MixonHe retired from Army on May 1, 2011 after 35 years of service.
P?draig FaulknerFollowing this appointment he retired to the backbenches before retiring completely from politics at the 1987 general election.
Frank B. UphamPlaced on the retired list on 1 October 1936, Rear Admiral Upham died in San Francisco, California.
Frederick Knight (MP)He held his parliamentary seat until 1885, for a remarkably long continuous period of 44 years, remarked on in the Vanity Fair caricature of him by Spy of the previous year captioned :'' has sat for three and forty years''.
Stanley SchumacherHe retired in 1997 from politics after the dissolution of the 24th Legislature after serving a total of three terms as an MLA.
Samuel JaskilkaHe retired on June 30, 1978 after thirty-six years of service.
Alexander Ivanovich CherepanovLieutenant-General Cherepanov retired from active duty in the armed forces after forty years in the military in 1955.
Clayton AndersonAnderson eventually retired from NASA in January 2013 after serving 15 years and is now turning his attention to education.
Charles D. W. Canham Canham retired from the Army in 1960 with 41 years of service.
Charles L. McCawleyHe retired from the Marine Corps August 24, 1929, having reached the mandatory retirement age of 64.
Clements MarkhamMarkham retired from his post in 1877, his 22 years of service entitling him to a pension.
Joyanto Nath ChaudhuriHe retired in 1966 after 38 years of military service.
Joan ChristensenOn January 27, 2010, Joan Christensen announced she was retiring from the New York State Assembly after 20 years of service.
Robin JorgensonJorgenson retired from provincial politics at dissolution of the assembly in 1967.
Antonio BajamontiHe would go on to hold the post for over two decades, until 1880, when he retired from office and was succeeded by Aleksandar Nallini, another Autonomist.
Charles F. Shoemaker Upon reaching the statutory retirement age of 64, Shoemaker was placed the Retired List on 27 March 1905.
Howard SafirSafir served four years as Police Commissioner until he announced his resignation and retirement from government service in 2000.
David Willison Willison retired from the Army in 1975, but stayed within public service.
Alan McNicollMcNicoll held his diplomatic post in Ankara for five years, before he returned to Australia in 1973 and retired to Canberra.
John Hubbard (admiral): Relinquishing command of the Asiatic Fleet on 16 May 1911, Hubbard retired from the Navy upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 62 on 19 May 1911.
William Hely Hely retired on 24 August 1966, after almost forty years in the military.
William BostockBostock was one of a number of senior Air Force commanders summarily retired early in 1946, in his case six years before the compulsory retirement age of 60.
Daniel W. BurschHe left NASA in May 2005, and later retired from active duty in July 2005 after 26 years of service in the U. S. Navy.
John Stephenson (cricketer, born 1907)He remained in the reserve until he reached the age limit for service on 6 November 1957.
Russell R. WaescheWaesche retired from the Coast Guard on December 31, 1945, after the longest tenure as Commandant ever.
Frank E. BeattyDetached from all active duty in September 1919, he retired on 6 October 1919.
Walt BuckBuck retired from provincial politics at dissolution of the assembly in 1989.
Franklin Charles GimsonGimson retired from the colonial service on 15 November 1952.
Hugh PlanchePlanche retired at dissolution of the legislature in 1986.
Frank Joseph RodimerRodimer retired as Bishop on June 1, 2004, after twenty-six years of service.
Clayton Keith YeutterYeutter was reinstated to the boards of ConAgra Foods, Caterpillar Inc. and Texas Instruments in 1993 and served on all three until he hit the maximum age limit for board members.
Geoffrey GreenGreen retired from The Times in 1976 after nearly 40 years of distinguished service.
David CubberleyCubberley retired from provincial politics in 2009.