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The songwriter died Friday at his home in Tyler, Texas, his agent Sam Schwartz of the Gorfaine/Schwartz Agency confirmed to The Times. "May his memory be a blessing," he said of Jennings via email ...
Anderson-McQueen Company is a privately owned funeral home headquartered in St. Petersburg, Florida. It is owned and operated by the second-generation McQueen family and serves Florida's Hillsborough and Pinellas Counties region with six service facilities. Anderson-McQueen is the first funeral home in the United States to practice flameless ...
Matthews Aurora Funeral Solutions (formerly the Aurora Casket Company) is one of the largest manufacturers of caskets and funerary urns in the United States, selling over 38% of the country's caskets as of 2005. The Aurora, Indiana–based company is a subsidiary of Pittsburgh-based Matthews International.
David C. Trosch died on 12 October 2012 in an Alabama nursing home from an extended illness. [11] Archbishop Oscar Lipscomb of the Archdiocese of Mobile clarified at the time of Trosch's death that he had never officially censured Trosch, but that Trosch had been restricted from acting in a pastoral capacity since August 1993.
CANTON ‒ A man and a woman died Sunday in what police describe as a murder-suicide. Police have identified the deceased victim as Jalyn N. Dempsey, a 20-year-old woman, and the deceased suspect ...
The following is a list of notable deaths in May 2023.. Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
Shirley Matthews, 70, Canadian pop singer. [191] Alasdair Milne, 82, British television producer, Director-General of the BBC (1982–1987), stroke. [192] Manuel Mota, 46, Spanish fashion designer, suicide by exsanguination. [193] Watson Parker, 88, American historian and author, specialist on the Black Hills. [194]
Grover Cullen Jennings (April 21, 1939 – June 8, 2020) was an American attorney and politician who served in the Virginia House of Delegates from 1982 until 1993, when he was defeated for reelection by Barnes Lee Kidd. His father, W. Pat Jennings, was a member of the United States House of Representatives. [1]