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Leroy G Hollen 1924 - 2003
Leroy G Hollen of Dearborn, Wayne County, MI was born on March 9, 1924, and died at age 79 years old on December 16, 2003.
Leroy G Hollen
Dearborn, Wayne County, MI 48124
March 9, 1924
December 16, 2003
Male
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Leroy G Hollen's History: 1924 - 2003
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03/91924
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12/162003December 16, 2003Death dateUnknownCause of deathUnknownDeath locationADVERTISEMENT BY ANCESTRY.COMView death records
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Did you know?Leroy G Hollen lived 6 years longer than the average Hollen family member when he died at the age of 79.The average age of a Hollen family member is 73.
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Did you know?
In 1924, in the year that Leroy G Hollen was born, in May, wealthy college students Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb kidnapped and killed 14 year old Robert Franks "in the interest of science". Leopold and Loeb thought that they were intellectually superior and that they could commit the perfect crime and not be caught. They were brought in for questioning within 8 days and quickly confessed. Clarence Darrow was hired as their defense lawyer, getting them life imprisonment instead of a death sentence. Loeb was eventually killed in prison - Leopold was released after 33 years, dying of a heart attack at age 66.
Did you know?
In 1958, by the time he was 34 years old, on March 24th, Elvis Presley was inducted into the United States Army. Although he could have served in Special Services as an entertainer, he chose to become a regular soldier. Almost everyone thought it would be the end of his career - it wasn't.
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Source(s): Social Security Death Index
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Other Biographies
Other Leroy Hollen Biographies
Other Hollen Family Biographies
Hollen, Colleen (Jul 19, 1929 - Sep 19, 2003)
Hollen, Olive (Nov 16, 1888 - Mar 1973)
Hollen, Martin (Jul 22, 1906 - Nov 1980)
Hollen, William (May 30, 1891 - Aug 1962)
Hollen, Lori (May 9, 1958 - May 27, 2010)
Hollen, Harry (Aug 26, 1918 - Mar 2, 1997)
Hollen, William (May 7, 1929 - Nov 6, 2003)
Hollen, Robert (Apr 21, 1928 - Aug 26, 1989)
Hollen, Maybelle (Aug 20, 1902 - Jun 1982)
Hollen, Lillian (Mar 23, 1915 - Nov 1979)
Hollen, Herbert (Dec 13, 1918 - Feb 26, 2000)
Hollen, Jerry (Jan 4, 1961 - Nov 29, 1993)
Hollen, Julia (Jul 22, 1886 - Sep 1968)
Hollen, Lillian (Mar 16, 1921 - Sep 5, 2001)
Hollen, Edwin (Apr 24, 1904 - Jul 1, 1996)
Hollen, Elsie (Mar 8, 1901 - Apr 1980)
Hollen, William (Mar 29, 1913 - Oct 1980)
Hollen, Ann (Dec 8, 1913 - Apr 27, 2009)
Hollen, Marie (Apr 2, 1906 - Mar 1978)
Hollen, Lila (Dec 5, 1911 - Jul 1987)
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The Debate Over Confederate Statues
There is a lot of controversy about statues on public land that honor those on the Confederacy side of the U.S. Civil War. Many of these statues and monuments - in fact the majority - were erected decades after the Civil War from about 1900 through 1920 (after the Plessy v. Ferguson trial which upheld racial segregation laws) and during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960's. Who were these men to whom a majority of these statues are dedicated? Perhaps the most interesting perspective comes from Robert E. Lee, one of the men who has the most memorials: "I think it wiser,” he wrote about a proposed Gettysburg memorial in 1869, “…not to keep open the sores of war but to follow the examples of those nations who endeavored to obliterate the marks of civil strife, to commit to oblivion the feelings engendered.”