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Nathaniel Samuel Fisher, Sr. (June 9, 1943 – December 24, 2000), played by Richard Jenkins, is the patriarch of the Fisher family and owner of Fisher & Sons Funeral Home until his death in a traffic accident on Christmas Eve, 2000. Although Ruth viewed him as a distant husband and father, many flashbacks show him trying his best to bond with ...
Ray Authement (born 1928), president of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, 1974–2008; Jamie Baldridge (born 1975), visual artist, writer; Carl W. Bauer (1933–2013), member of both houses of the Louisiana State Legislature; lobbyist for the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, 1990–2010; Henri Willis Bendel, fashion designer and ...
Bernard Fisher, surgeon (b. 1918) [490] Morton Mandel , billionaire businessman and philanthropist (b. 1921) [ 491 ] Harold Scheub , professor and folklorist of African cultures (b. 1931) [ 492 ]
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This summer alone, the Phoenix area baked through a record 31 consecutive days above 110 degrees, a shocking heatwave that was partly responsible for more than 500 heat-related deaths in Maricopa ...
The granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Connolly, [3] Wygant was born in Lafayette, Indiana. [4] She described her ancestry as French, Irish, and Texan. [5] She had two younger brothers, Gordon and Carl Connolly. Their mother died of cancer when Wygant was 16 years old.
Toni Jo Henry (née Annie Beatrice McQuiston; [1] January 3, 1916 – November 28, 1942) was the only woman ever to be executed in Louisiana's electric chair. [2] Married to Claude 'Cowboy' Henry, she decided to break her husband out of jail where he was serving a fifty-year sentence in the Texas State Penitentiary for murder.
Fisher was named for Oliver Williams Fisher and built between 1899 and 1901 by the Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber Company. It remained a company town until the sawmill was sold to Boise Cascade Corporation in 1966. [2] In 1979, the remaining company buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Fisher Historic District.