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Born in Indiana as A. Macon Bolling, he moved to New England at some point in the early 1840s and changed his name to Macon Bolling Allen in Boston in January 1844. [1] Soon after, Allen moved to Portland, Maine and studied law, working as an apprentice to Samuel Fessenden, a local abolitionist and attorney. The Portland District Court rejected ...
Ohio, Wisconsin: 1978–1991: 16: Known as the "Milwaukee Cannibal" [16] David Van Dyke: Milwaukee 1979–1980 6 Burglar who murdered people after tricking them into letting him into their homes [17] Lorenzo Fayne: Wisconsin, Illinois: 1989–1993: 6: Serial killer and rapist who murdered one woman and five children in the states of Wisconsin ...
According to some sources, Morris and Macon Bolling Allen opened America's first black law office in Boston, [5] but the authors of Sarah's Long Walk say there is "no direct knowledge that [Allen and Morris] ever met", [6] nor is such a partnership mentioned in Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844-1944.
An autopsy report revealed that six-month-old baby Nalani Adalee Allen had blunt force injuries and internal bleeding when she died, police said. Broken ribs, blunt force trauma: Homestead parents ...
Former Fox News host Eric Bolling warned parents and their children of the dangers of opioid use on the six-month anniversary of the death of his son from an opioid overdose.
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Macon Bolling Allen (1816–1894), judge of the Charleston County, South Carolina, Criminal Court Michael P. Allen (born 1967), judge of the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims William J. Allen (1829–1901), judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois
Aerial view of Clark County crash that killed nine people March 8, 2024. Seven of the nine victims killed Friday in a crash in west-central Wisconsin were members of an Amish community from a ...