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Born Richard Byron Wetmore in Glens Falls, New York, [1] he played the violin before entering the Army, but wished to join the Army Band and taught himself to play the cornet. He had formal musical training at the New England Conservatory of Music , but credited his improvisational skills to his period in the army.
Richard Byron, 2nd Baron Byron (1606 – 4 October 1679) was an English nobleman, Royalist, politician, peer, knight, and supporter of Charles I during the English ...
Richard Lugar, U.S. Senator and former mayor of Indianapolis (Indianapolis) Thomas R. Marshall, U.S. Vice President (North Manchester) Mack F. Mattingly, U.S. Senator from Georgia, Asst. Sec Genl. NATO, US Ambassador; Edward Ralph May, only delegate to the Indiana Constitutional Convention of 1850 to support African American suffrage
Richard Byron may refer to: Richard Byron, 2nd Baron Byron (1606–1679), English Royalist during the English Civil War Richard Byron, 12th Baron Byron (1899–1989), British peer and British Army officer
Byron was the son of Richard Byron, 2nd Baron Byron and Elizabeth Rossell. He succeeded to the title of 3rd Baron Byron in 1679 upon the death of his father.. Lord Byron died on 13 November 1695, and was succeeded by his fifth (but only surviving) son William Byron, 4th Baron Byron (born 1669/70).
The Air Indiana Flight 216 crash occurred on December 13, 1977, at 19:22 CST, when a Douglas DC-3, registration N51071 carrying the University of Evansville basketball team, the Evansville Purple Aces, crashed on takeoff at the Evansville Regional Airport in Evansville, Indiana. The aircraft lost control and crashed shortly after lift-off. [1]
Jurors deliberated 18 hours over four days before finding Richard Allen guilty in the deaths of Libby German and Abby Williams in Delphi, Indiana.
Byron Kosciusko Elliott (September 4, 1835 – April 19, 1913) was an American lawyer, judge, and jurist from the state of Indiana.Elliott served as the city attorney of Indianapolis, a judge of the Marion County criminal and superior court, and a justice of the Indiana Supreme Court from January 3, 1881, to January 2, 1893.