Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 16 de ago. de 2015 · 1913 April 27 - Mary Phagan, an employee of the National Pencil Company, is found murdered in the factory basement by night watchman Newt Lee April 29 - Funeral of Mary Phagan May 8 - Coroner’s jury orders Newt Lee and Leo Frank to be held for the murder of Mary Phagan May 18 - Police begin questioning of Jim Conley, the pencil factory’s black janitor May 23 - Grand jury indicts Leo Frank ...

  2. 6 de abr. de 2023 · The Murder of Mary Phagan Mary Phagan was on her way to Atlanta’s Confederate Memorial Day parade on April 26, 1913 when she stopped in at the National Pencil Company to collect her paycheck ...

  3. 4 de may. de 2016 · Atlanta Constitution. Sunday, May 4 th, 1913. At the top is a sketch made by Henderson from the last photograph taken of little Mary Phagan, the 14-year-old girl of tragedy. Below is a photograph of her mother and step-father, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Coleman, and her sister, Miss Ollie Phagan. The other picture was taken at the funeral.

  4. I nodded sadly. "My name is Mary Phagan. Little Mary Phagan was my greataunt." For a moment the couple stared at me in disbelief, and then they wrapped their arms around me to comfort me. "Yes," the old woman said, "I can see the resemblance now." Breaking the embrace, she patted my shoulder gently. For a

  5. 23 de feb. de 2018 · Armed with guns they raided the jail and drove Frank 150 miles to the site of an oak grove in Mary's hometown of Marietta, where they lynched him from a tree. The last act of the mob, none of whom were ever charged with any crime, was to return Frank's wedding ring to his wife in accordance with his last words.

  6. 26 de oct. de 2003 · New York: Pantheon Books. $35. THE single most famous lynching in American history remains that of Leo Frank, a Jewish factory superintendent in Atlanta, convicted in 1913 of murdering Mary Phagan ...

  7. 10 de ago. de 2023 · Criminal Justice, Heinous Histories, History. In the ominous early morning of April 27, 1913, a chilling discovery sent shockwaves through the very heart of Atlanta, Georgia. In the dim and musty confines of a factory basement, the lifeless body of Mary Phagan, a mere 14-year-old girl, was stumbled upon by a lone night watchman.