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  2. Lists of deaths by year - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_deaths_by_year

    This page was last edited on 23 January 2025, at 18:23 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.

  3. Carrie Winder McGavock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_Winder_McGavock

    Caroline "Carrie" Winder McGavock (née Winder; September 9, 1829 – February 22, 1905) was an American slave owner and the caretaker of the McGavock Confederate Cemetery at Carnton, a historic plantation complex in Franklin, Tennessee. [1] [2] Her life was the subject of a 2005 best-selling novel by Robert Hicks, entitled The Widow of the South.

  4. Keegan-Michael Key - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keegan-Michael_Key

    Key was born in Southfield, Michigan, on March 22, 1971, [1] [2] the son of an African-American father, Leroy McDuffie, and Carrie Herr, a woman of Polish and Flemish descent. [3] [4] He was adopted at a young age by a couple from Detroit, Michael Key and Patricia Walsh, who were both social workers. Like his birth parents, his adoptive parents ...

  5. Sue Snell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sue_Snell

    Sue and Carrie have a brief telepathic conversation as Carrie uses her telepathy to communicate with Sue, in which she convinces Carrie she had no part in Chris's plan. Carrie cries out for her mother and dies, every detail of her death witnessed by a horrified Sue, who later identifies Carrie's body for the official records. As Sue flees the ...

  6. Wikipedia:Top 25 Report/December 25 to 31, 2016 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Top_25_Report/...

    In her stage show, Wishful Drinking, Carrie explained how, having fathered her and her brother, he went to console his best friend's widow, Elizabeth Taylor, in the wake of his death. "My father flew to Elizabeth's side, gradually making his way slowly to her front". She would very quickly ditch him for Richard Burton. Carrie seemed to have ...

  7. Carrie Bushyhead Quarles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_Bushyhead_Quarles

    In 1917, the year that her husband died, [52] an article in the Westville Record, "The History of Education in Adair County", named Quarles as "among the best teachers of her time". [30] Her biographer, Marilyn Watt wrote, "Carrie Bushyhead Quarles carved a niche for herself in what was perhaps the only accepted outlet for female leadership ...

  8. List of deaths due to COVID-19 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deaths_due_to_COVID-19

    Place of death 25 January 2020: Liang Wudong: 60 Doctor (first death due to hospital-acquired infection) China 26 January 2020: Wang Xianliang: 62 Politician China (Wuhan) 27 January 2020: Yang Xiaobo: 57 Politician China (Wuhan) 31 January 2020: Wen Zengxian: 67 Politician China (Wuhan) 1 February 2020: Andy Gill: 64 Musician and music producer

  9. Carrie Underwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrie_Underwood

    Carrie Marie Underwood was born on March 10, 1983, [2] [3] in Muskogee, Oklahoma, to Carole (née Shatswell) and Steve Underwood. [4] She has two older sisters, Shanna and Stephanie, [5] and was raised on her parents' farm in the nearby rural town of Checotah. [6] Her father worked in a paper mill while her mother taught elementary school. [7]