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  2. 14 hours ago · Danville Neil was imprisoned for a minimum of 32 years in November 2022 for the murder of Second World War veteran William Bryan, 71, and the manslaughter of his sister, 74-year-old widow Anne ...

  3. 14 hours ago · Anne Castle and William Bryan (PA) Mrs Castle suffered a heart attack and Mr Bryan went into cardiac arrest after being beaten and smothered during the night-time raid. Jurors heard that Neil pulled two wedding rings and two diamond rings from Mrs Castle’s fingers but failed to find some £4,000 in cash, some of which had been stashed in socks.

  4. 2 days ago · William Jennings Bryan was born in southern Illinois in 1860, just before the Civil War exploded. He attended law school at then Union Law College, which is now Northwestern University. Early in his legal career, Bryan moved west to Lincoln, the capital of fast-growing Nebraska.

  5. Jul 1, 2024 · Cross of Gold speech, classic of American political oratory delivered on July 8, 1896, by William Jennings Bryan in closing the debate on the party platform at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago during the campaign for the presidential election of 1896.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Jun 13, 2024 · William Smith Bryan and Catherine Morgan were both born in County Claire, Ireland. During the Puritan Rebellion, William Smith Bryan attempted to gain the throne of Ireland and was dubbed, “Prince William of Ireland” by his followers.

    • Catherine Bryan
    • County Clare, Ireland
    • June 1579
    • June 1, 1667
  7. Jul 1, 2024 · But if you want real youth, you’ll have to back to the late 19th century, when the Democrat and the People's Party (Populist) candidate were one and the same: a wildly-popular 33-year-old Nebraskan, William Jennings Bryan.

  8. Jun 26, 2024 · William Jennings Bryan. Democratic candidate in 1896 that advocated in free silver movement, farming interests and improved conditions for the urban working class. He gained immense support of the populist party after his famous "Cross of gold speech". Cornelius Vanderbilt.