Wilson Dam Labor Foreman was shot and instantly killed by his wife defending herself
VC Miller
Sept 4, 1924
Wilson Dam Labor foreman shot and instantly killed by wife defending herself
V. C. Miller threatens his wife and goes after a hatchet when she probs fatal load into his head from a single barrel shotgun.
A man reported having been abusive toward his wife before.
VC Miller labor foreman at Wilson Dam was shot and instantly killed by his wife at their home on the south side reservation shortly after 8:30 o’clock last night.
Immediately after the shooting the wife and two small children, ages 3, and 5 took refuge in the home of a neighbor where they remained under guard last night, K. S. Skinner, chief of Guards at the dam, announced this morning that she would be held on the reservation until a preliminary hearing was held before United States Commissioner Merwin Koone at the Federal Building in Florence this afternoon at five o’clock.
According to statements from neighbors miller had been very overbearing with his wife for some time. He had threatened her on several occasions so the story goes, and recently ordered her to pack her clothes and other personal effects and leave.
Yesterday according to the information given to the authorities by a resident of the reservation, he demanded his discharge and payment in full at the dam. Upon airing at his home he immediately became involved in a quarrel with his wife and when he threatened her life she secured a single-barreled shotgun and shot him, the load striking him in the abdomen. The wounded man rushed for a hatchet but before he could reach his wife with it she reloaded the gun and fired point-blank into his face causing instant death.
After arriving at the home of W.N. Tracy a neighbor Mrs. Miller collapsed. Guards a the dam were notified of the killing and they, in turn, telephoned the Morrison Undertaking Establishment who removed the body to Florence to prepare it for burial.
Mr. and Mrs. Milled have lived at the dam for the past two years. They came here from Chattanooga, TN the Deceased had been employed in different divisions of construction work at
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Negro Killed at Wilson Dam today Richard Buckingham Aug 4, 1925 Buried Buckingham Cemetery Lauderdale Co Al
Negro Killed at Wilson Dam
Richard Buckingham, a colored laborer at Wilson Dam, met almost instant death this morning when the stay chains of a dump car which was being unloaded brake unfastened and permitted the heavyweight of the dump bucket to swing over knocking him down and catching his head.
The injured man was gotten from beneath the weight immediately and rushed to the first aid station but died before he got there.
The dump car was one of the large ones of twenty tonnes capacity, and the accident occurred on the Jackson Island section where the unloading was taking place at about 8:10 o’clock this morning.
Buckingham was a resident of Florence living near Chisholm Road.
Tom Tate May 24, 1924 buried Maplewood Cemetery Pulaski, TN
Accident This Morning Fatal at Wilson Dam
Concrete Forman Dies After Having Back Broken Today
Tim Tate one of the foremen at Wilson Dam, received injuries this morning from which he died in a little more than an hour, after being rushed to the Coffee Memorial Hospital here for treatment. He was struck by a loaded concrete bucket that fell from one of the big cranes, and his back was broken and other injuries were sustained. He was a resident of the reservation at Plant Two, having come here from Pulaski, Tenn., and is survived by his widow and several small children. His death came about half an hour after reaching the hospital. The accident occurred on the south side of the dam where construction was going forward on the powerhouse.
TOM TATE MAY 24, 1924
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NEGRO has fatal fall at Wilson Dam Nathan Mosley April 30, 1924 "Nathan Mosley, 21-year-old negro, was almost instantly killed yesterday afternoon at about 2 o'clock when he fell from the top of Wilson am while climbing on the structure above the powerhouse. The negro attempted to cath in a wedge that protruded from a concrete form at the top of the dam when it came loose, causing the negro to fall to his death. He fell more than 60 feet and died while en route to the hospital. |
William Necke Jan 26, 1925 Buried St Michaels Cemetery St Florian, Al Local Citizen Killed at Dam Loses balance on top of Dam and falls to water below death occurs by drowning stunned by fall, unable to get out of shallow water William A. Mecke, a member of a prominent St. Florian family met an instant death this morning when he fell from the tip of the dam into the spillway, the fall of eighty feet into the water stunning him to the extent that he was unable to save himself, although the water was only four or five feet deep, and drowning occurred before those working with him could reach his body. Every means of artificial respiration was used, but he could not be revived. The accident occurred in the Jackson Island section, where the water is comparatively still below the spillway. Meeke and has been employed at the dam since work was resumed some time ago, being a member of the force of carpenters. He was well known throughout the country as the son of Leo P. Meeke, a prominent farmer of St Florian He was 32 years of age and left a wong wife and two children, Mary Ann aged 2, and an infant of only 2 weeks. He is also survived by his father, mother, three brothers, and three sisters, Leo, Frank, Thomas Mecke, Mrs. Harry Epping, Mrs. Frank Henke, and Miss Genevieve Meeke, all of this county. He made his home near that of his father at St. Florian. He spent all of his life here except the period during which he was in army service during the war. The body was taken in charge by James J. Phillips and removed to the funeral home on Wood Avenue. Arrangements for the funeral had not been made at two o'clock this afternoon. |