Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Jonathan Myrick Daniels (March 20, 1939 – August 20, 1965) was an Episcopal seminarian and civil rights activist. In 1965, he was killed by Tom Coleman, a highway worker and part-time deputy sheriff, in Hayneville, Alabama , while in the act of shielding 17-year-old Ruby Sales from a racist attack. [1]

  3. Jun 22, 1997 · Nobody was much surprised when an all-white jury found Mr. Coleman not guilty in the death of Jonathan Myrick Daniels, 26, an Episcopal seminarian from Keene, N.H.

  4. Oct 6, 2016 · Overview. On August 20, 1965, Lowndes County Sheriff s Office (LCSO) Special Deputy Thomas Coleman, the subject, fatally shot Jonathan Daniels, the victim. Earlier that day, the 26-year-old victim, a white seminary student, was released from the jail in Hayneville, Alabama where he had been detained following a voting rights demonstration in ...

  5. Thomas Coleman, a highway engineer, stopped the group at the door and cursed at the two Black women, according to a Department of Justice memo. Coleman then raised his shotgun toward one of the...

  6. On August 20, 1965, Jonathan Daniels and several other civil rights activists wanted to buy a coke after getting out of jail. A few minutes later, the 26-year-old Episcopal seminary student lay dead in Alabama, having stepped in front of a shotgun blast intended for a fellow activist, Ruby Sales.

  7. Daniels, Jonathan Myrick. March 20, 1939 to August 20, 1965. A seminary student who responded to Martin Luther King’s call for participants in the Selma to Montgomery March, Daniels was shot and killed by a deputy sheriff in Hayneville, Alabama, who was later acquitted of the crime.

  8. Aug 20, 2015 · ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST: Fifty years ago today, August 20, 1965, Jonathan Daniels was killed in Alabama. He was shot while saving the life of a young black activist. Melanie Peeples brings us a...