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Shot while serving a search warrant. [57] [58] [59] Patrolman Earl Charles "Chuck" Ashton: Osburn, Idaho Police Department: August 17, 1976: Shot while conducting a traffic stop. [57] [60] Deputy Sheriff Rodney Badger: Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office: April 29, 1853: Drowned while rescuing a family from the Weber River. [61] Sheriff Ralph ...
His funeral was conducted by the Arizona Pioneers Historical Society, and their eulogy declared, "he held positions of public trust, and in all was active, faithful, and honest." [ 18 ] : 94 The cause of death was arterial sclerosis , and secondarily syphilis , which he had contracted thirty years earlier (in 1882, while sheriff in Tombstone).
When Wyatt and his men approached, the two men ran. Stilwell stumbled, allowing Wyatt to catch him. In a story published on May 14, 1893, Wyatt told a reporter for the Denver Republican he shot Stilwell as he attempted to push the barrel of Earp's shotgun away. [18] I ran straight for Stilwell. It was he who killed my brother. What a coward he was!
Wyatt was born in Louisville to Richard H. and Mary (Watkins) Wyatt and attended the University of Louisville and the University of Louisville School of Law. [1] He was admitted to the bar in 1927. He was the principal counsel for The Louisville Courier-Journal and other Bingham family-owned media companies prior to launching his political career.
Felton Mark Wyatt (May 23, 1920 – June 29, 2006) was a CIA agent. He was raised in Woodland, California and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley in 1942. During World War II , he served as a communications officer on board of the destroyer "Conner" in the Pacific theater.
Bertram Wyatt-Brown (March 19, 1932 – November 5, 2012) was a noted historian of the Southern United States. He was the Richard J. Milbauer Professor Emeritus at the University of Florida , where he taught from 1983 to 2004; he also taught at Case Western University for nearly two decades.
It was placed at the location of her childhood home, which is now the parking lot for the Keeler Memorial Building on the Health Department's campus. [22] The marker sits along the Dora Franklin Finley African-American Heritage Trail in Mobile, Alabama. [22] In 2018, a street in downtown Mobile was named in her honor. [23]
Wyatt-Brown was born in Eufaula, Alabama on February 14, 1884, the son of Eugene L. Brown and Serena Hoole. In 1941 he legally changed his name from Wyatt Hunter Brown to Hunter Wyatt-Brown. He studied at the Sewanee: The University of the South from where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1905 and with a Bachelor of Divinity in 1908.