United States
Joseph Smith, Jr., (1844), Mormon leader, Presidential candidate
Hyrum Smith, (1844), Mormon leader, killed along with Smith
Henry Heusken, (1861), American diplomat (accompanying Townsend Harris from Amsterdam)
Abraham Lincoln, (1865), President of the United States
Thomas Hindman, (1868), Confederate General
James Hinds, (1868), U.S. Congressman killed by members of the Ku Klux Klan
Edward Canby, (1873), Union General, leader of a peace conference
Crazy Horse, (1877), Oglala Sioux chief killed by American troops
James Garfield, (1881), President of the United States
Carter Harrison, Sr., (1893), Mayor of Chicago
William Goebel, (1900), Governor of Kentucky
William McKinley, (1901), President of the United States
Frank Steunenberg, (1905), former governor of Idaho
Don Mellett, (1926), newspaper editor and campaigner against organized crime
Anton Cermak, (1933), mayor of Chicago
Huey P. Long, (1935), Louisiana senator and former governor
Curtis Chillingworths, (1955), a Florida judge
John F. Kennedy, (1963), President of the United States
Lee Harvey Oswald, (1963), alleged assassin of John F. Kennedy
Medgar Evers, (1963), U.S. civil rights activist
Malcolm X, (1965), black leader, killed in a Manhattan banquet room after giving a speech
George Lincoln Rockwell, (1967), founder of the American Nazi Party
Martin Luther King Jr., (1968), U.S. civil rights activist
Robert F. Kennedy, (1968), Presidential candidate
Fred Hampton, (1969), Deputy Chairman of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party
Harold Haley, (1970), Marin County Superior Court Judge taken hostage in an effort to free George Jackson from police custody
Orlando Letelier, (1976), Chilean ambassador to the United States under the administration of Salvador Allende
Harvey Milk, (1978), gay rights campaigner and city supervisor of San Francisco, California
George Moscone, (1978), Mayor of San Francisco killed along with Milk
John Wood, (1979), first US federal judge killed in the twentieth century
John Lennon, (1980), musician and anti-war icon (British national)
Alan Berg, (1984), radio talk-show host, killed by Neo-nazis
Chiang Nan, (1984), Taiwanese-American writer, allegedly killed by Kuomintang agents
Alex Odeh, (1985), Arab anti-discrimination group leader, killed when bomb explodes in his Santa Ana, California office
Alejandro González Malavé, (1986), famous undercover policeman, in Bayamón, Puerto Rico
Don Aronow, (1987), inventor of the cigarette boat
Meir Kahane, (1990), American rabbi, founder of Jewish Defense League, former member of Israel's Knesset, shot in New York City
Ioan P. Culianu, (1991), professor of divinity
Tupac Shakur, (1996), all-star rapper/actor/activist
The Notorious B.I.G.,(1997), all-star rapper
Tommy Burks, (1998), Tennessee State Senator
Thomas C. Wales, (2001), Washington federal prosecutor and gun control advocate
James E. Davis, (2003), New York City Council Member
2006-08-22 13:35:21
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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