accidental death
He Rode Into the Sunset
Submitted by mary on Wed, 11/19/2008 - 05:32.February 14, 1924
62-year-old John Byrne, a character actor who typically played the role of the grizzled old sourdough in films, was found dead in his room at 509 Temple Street, a boarding house. Police investigating the room found that a tube that connected the gas to a small heater had been pulled, or accidentally kicked, loose.
It was unclear whether Byrne, whose real name was John McGuire, had intended to die.
There was no suicide note, and it appeared that at his time of death, Byrne had been reading a western story in a popular magazine. The magazine was opened to page 41, the last page of the story, and the last line read, "And so, with the same old cheery smile on his sun-cracked lips, Sagebrush Jim came to the end of the trail."
Women and Whisky
Submitted by mary on Wed, 09/24/2008 - 04:20.
The scene was a bar at 822 West Third Street, the players, a group of hard-drinking Bunker Hill regulars, but the story would turn tragic on July 22, 1956.
Harold J. McAnally of 230 South Flower (the Van Fleet Apartments) tried to buy a drink for a woman in the bar, when he was pushed from his barstool by a jealous rival. McAnally fell, cracking his head on the bar's concrete floor and fracturing his skull. As you can see in the picture here, though McAnally is lying prone on the ground, no one seems to be all that concerned. Perhaps the regulars were callous, or didn't care for him, but it's also possible that McAnally was already dead, and nothing was left to be done.
He arrived DOA at the Georgia Receiving Hospital, and shortly thereafter, Frank Swope, 33, turned himself in to the police, confessing that he was the one who had shoved McAnally at the bar. Swope hadn't meant to hurt him; he was just angry about McAnally's flirtation.
Death At the Imperial Hotel: 350 South Figueroa
Submitted by mary on Wed, 06/11/2008 - 04:47.November 16, 1931

This morning, Gene Bowman, 15, and his brother Earl, 22, decided to sleep late after their mother departed for work.
In the apartment directly beneath them, R.V. Darby, the Mayor of Inglewood, president of the Federated Church Brotherhoods of Los Angeles, and owner of Kilz Exterminator Company was conducting a routine fumigation for bed bugs.
As always, he had notified the Health Department, and given written and verbal notice to all occupants of the building, asking them to leave their rooms and open the windows. And as always, he was using cyanide gas.
While Darby worked, unbeknownst to him, deadly gas was seeping up into the Bowman's apartment through a small hole in the floor around a steam pipe. Both brothers were asphyxiated while they slept.




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