4004 W. 17th Street, in Los Angeles, CA
But, it is long gone.
Wyatt Earp was eighty when he died in Los Angeles, CA on January 13th, 1929.
to Italy or rome they travel different places but edward goes to Italy
i grieve - peter gabriel
She became ill due to infection. She died in the Los Angeles Hospital:(
Duncan died of a heart attack in Los Angeles on September 3, 2012.
Wyatt Earp died in Los Angeles, CA on January 13, 1929, at the age of eighty.
Wyatt Earp was eighty when he died in Los Angeles, CA on January 13th, 1929.
He died of natural causes on January 13, 1929 (aged 80) In Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
In the 1939 Movie "Frontier Marshal" Wyatt Earp was played by Randolph Scott. There was a 1934 movie based on the same story that had the hero's name being Michael Wyatt and was played by George O'Brian. The first time Wyatt Earp was portrayed in a movie is in Wild Bill Hickock, a 1923 film directed by Clifford Smith. William S. Hart plays Hickock and Bert Lindlay is Wyatt Earp. Wyatt who then lived in the Los Angeles area was contacted to be a consultant on the film! Wyatt Earp died in 1929.
Walter Wyatt died on March 7, 1986, in Los Angeles County, California, USA.
Eustace Wyatt died on October 25, 1944, in Los Angeles, California, USA of heart failure.
Josephine Sarah Marcus Earp died on December 19, 1944, in Los Angeles, California, USA of natural causes.
Wyatt Russell was born on July 10, 1986, in Los Angeles, California, USA.
Deance Wyatt was born on July 19, 1986, in Los Angeles, California, USA.
4004 W. 17th StreetLost Angeles Calif.Wyatt Earp died at the house on 17th Street on January 13, 1929. William S. Hart served as a pallbearer and Western actor Tom Mix attended, as did many of the old timers from Tombstone, the Klondike, and the Nevada and Whipple Mountain mining camps. A lengthy obituary in the Los Angeles Times said in part, "it was like a reunion of the sturdy men and women who knew Wyatt as a wiry, six-foot, two-gun officer of the law in mining town, cow camp and almost anywhere along the frontier where trouble was apt to pop loose." (Cited in "The Earp Papers," p. 232.)
Ana de los Angeles Monteagudo died in 1686.
Dom Vail