Johnse Hatfield was a member of the Hatfield family of the well-known Hatfield and McCoy fued in West Virginia.
No, Johnse Hatfield died naturally in April 1922 in Wharncliffe, West Virginia.
The Hatfield and McCoy feud started in 1863. It ended in 1891. It took place at Tug Fort of the Big Sandy River in West Virginia and Kentucky.
Mark O. Hatfield was not directly related to the Hatfields involved in the Hatfield-McCoy feud. He was a prominent Oregon politician and served as a U.S. Senator from 1967 to 1997. The Hatfield-McCoy feud was a notorious conflict between two families in West Virginia and Kentucky during the late 19th century, and Mark O. Hatfield's family lineage is not connected to that historical feud.
Johnse Hatfield (1862-1922) was sentenced to life imprisonment in March of 1900 for the murder of Alifair McCoy. Hatfield was convicted in Pike County, Kentucky 12 years after killing Alifair during the Hatfield-McCoy feud. Hatfield only ended up serving 13 years of his life sentence, and died in West Virginia in April of 1922.
The Hatfield-McCoy feud occurred in the West Virginia/Kentucky back-country along the Tug Fork, off the Big Sandy River, near Pikesville, West Virginia. The Hatfields lived on the West Virgina side of the river, and fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. The McCoys lived on the Kentucky side, and fought primarily for the Union.
West Virginia is divided up into nine regions. They are the Northern Panhandle, Mountaineer Country, the Eastern Panhandle, the Potomac Highlands, the Mountain Lakes, the New River/Greenbrier Valley, the Hatfield-McCoy Mountains, the Metro Valley, and the Mid-Ohio Valley.
Johnson Hatfield was born on January 5, 1862, in Logan County, West Virginia, USA.
Johnse Hatfield died on April 20, 1922 in Warncliffe, West Virginia of natural causes.
Johnse Hatfield died on April 20, 1922 in Warncliffe, West Virginia of natural causes.
West Virginia has many attractions, including Spruce Knob, the New River Gorge, the Greenbrier Resort, the Hatfield-McCoy Trail System, Snowshoe Mountain, and the Mardi Gras Casino and Resort, among many others.
Eastern Panhandle Northern Panhandle Metro Valley Mid-Ohio Valley Mountain Lakes Mountaineer Country New River/Greenbrier Valley Potomac Highlands Hatfield-McCoy Mountains