Philip Barton Key (1818-1859)

Philip Barton Key (b:1818, Georgetown, DC - d:27 February 1859, Washington, DC) was the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, the son of Francis Scott Key, and a murder victim. In 1859, Congressman Daniel Sickles shot and killed Phillip Barton Key, for having conducted an affair with his wife Teresa. The murder took place on Lafayette Square, just north of the White House. Sickles was acquitted, on the basis of temporay insanity, in one of the most controversial trials of the 19th century. Key at the time of his death was serving as the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia. Key, Philip Barton Key, Philip Barton Key, Philip Barton

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
okura kishichiro
chicago public schools
sleepytime gorilla museum
paolo vidoz
arcturus mengsk
list of library associations
paragone
cobray company
roundabout (play)
trevor hagstrom
minoru mochizuki
list of library and information science programs
kongo jungle
bmt nassau street line
fundamental theorems of welfare economics
the two fundamental theorems of welfare economics
mount sugarloaf (newcastle, australia)
pega
breage
coin's financial school
false arrest
badme
sodium acetate
burtas
lie ring
royal navy dockyard
privileged mode
akelarre, navarre
naval dockyard
akelarre (cipher)
st. clair tunnel
hebenon
john 20:4
oneida creek
shojo beat
adrian of may
heating pad
sha tin college
fictitious defendants
maria asuncion aramburuzabala
iga (supermarkets)
atemajac de brizuela
eugenio garza laguera
hazer tarkhan