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Leona Hutton: 1892 1949 56 Actress Codeine Unknown [337] Phyllis Hyman: 1949 1995 45 Singer Pentobarbital and secobarbital: Suicide [338] Fanny Imlay: 1794 1816 22 Wife Laudanum Suicide [339] Andy Irons: 1978 2010 32 Surfer Multiple Unknown
Hutton, also known as Mrs. Mary Epstein, committed suicide in 1949, by an overdose of codeine. She died in an iron lung in Maumee Hospital in Toledo, Ohio, eighteen hours after she was discovered by her husband. She had been confined to her home for ten weeks because of a leg fracture. Coroner Paul Hohly returned a suicide verdict. Hutton was ...
Dewey F. Bartlett, Sr. (1919–1979), Oklahoma governor and U.S. senator; Dan Boren (born 1973), represents Oklahoma's 2nd Congressional district in the U.S. House; David Boren (born 1941), former governor of Oklahoma, U.S. senator and University of Oklahoma president; Donna Campbell (born 1954), physician and member of the Texas Senate; reared ...
Leonard Sullivan was born on December 12, 1934, in Dale, Oklahoma, to Leonard Fulton Sullivan and Willie Lee Stone.He graduated from Dale High School and later graduated from Murray State College in 1956 where he was president of the League of Young Democrats.
Originally built in 1915 as Grace Methodist Episcopal Church, the stone structure located at 304 South Trenton Avenue in Tulsa's Pearl District was converted to a recording studio in 1972 by Leon Russell, who bought the building and adjoining properties for his diverse recording activities and as a home for Shelter Records, the company he had previously started with partner Denny Cordell.
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Leon Quincy Jackson (January 9, 1926, [1] or 1927–July 21, 1995), [2] was an American architect and professor. He was known for his modernist building designs. He is thought to be the first black architect in Oklahoma, [3] however he faced discrimination and was not able to take the state licensing exam.
Oklahoma County District Court (1988–1999); Oklahoma Seventh District Court (1999–2005) Oklahoma: deceased: Henry Bramwell [83] United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (1974–2010) New York: deceased: William McKinley Branch [84] Greene County Probate Court (appt. 1970) Alabama: deceased: George Bridges [85]