|
July 1 — Stephen Gaskin, a counterculture visionary who led a caravan of hippies from California to establish one of the country's longest lasting communes in rural Middle Tennessee and later sought the Green Party nomination for president, died at 79.
June 22 — Grand Ole Opry member Jimmy C. Newman, known for mixing Cajun and country music, died at 86.
Sept. 23 — A.W. Davis, an All-America guard at Tennessee who later worked as an assistant coach and broadcaster for his alma mater, died at 71.
June 22 — Teenie Hodges, the diminutive guitarist and "Take Me to the River" songwriter who became a towering figure in the Memphis music scene, died at 68.
Oct. 20 — Luther Masingill, a veteran broadcaster who worked for the same Chattanooga station for more than 70 years, died at 92. Masingill was a member of the National Radio Hall of Fame, which describes him as "the only announcer in America to have broadcast news of the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor and the 2001 destruction of the World Trade Center." He was known for using his radio broadcast to help people find lost pets.
Jan. 20 — Greeneville Sun columnist Bob Hurley, who spent more than four decades at the newspaper, died at 69.
April 9 — Bobby Denton, who worked as Neyland Stadium's public address announcer for nearly half a century, died at 73.
Oct. 11 — Elbert Drungo Jr., who played 120 games over nine seasons with the Houston Oilers and a season with Buffalo, died at 71. He was drafted in 1969 in the third round out of Tennessee State and later coached at Fisk University for four years.
Oct. 23 — John "Bull" Bramlett,NBA Jerseys China, a former professional football and baseball player who was nicknamed the "Meanest Man in Football," died at 73. He was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals out of college and played minor league baseball for three years before changing to pro football where he played with the Denver Broncos,Jerseys Wholesale, the Miami Dolphins, the Boston (now New England) Patriots and the Atlanta Falcons. When the Memphis native retired from football, he became a Christian evangelist.
July 12 — Ken Netherland, who won the most games of any high school football coach in Tennessee history, died at 74.
Oct. 30 — Former Iowa State football coach and Florida State and Vanderbilt athletic director Clay Stapleton died at 93. At Vanderbilt, he hired Steve Sloan, who took the Commodores to their first bowl game in nearly 20 years in 1974.
March 8 — Ted Welch, a prolific fundraiser in Tennessee Republican politics for four decades, died at 80.
Dec. 4 — Bob Montgomery, a songwriter and producer who wrote hits for pop and country artists from Buddy Holly to Eddy Arnold died at 77.
Nov. 10 — Former state Rep. Emmitt Ford, who served in the legislature from 1974 until 1981, when he resigned after he was convicted and sentenced to prison on insurance fraud charges,Jerseys NFL Wholesale, died in Memphis at age 70.
Dec. 2 — Saxophonist Bobby Keys,Cheap NFL Jerseys Online, a lifelong rock 'n' roller who toured with Buddy Holly, played on recordings by John Lennon and laid down one of the all-time blowout solos on the Rolling Stones' "Brown Sugar," died at 70.
April 26 — Michael Heisley, the billionaire businessman who bought the Vancouver Grizzlies and moved the NBA team to Memphis, died at 77.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Jan. 11 — Dave Walker, who coached East Tennessee State's track program for about half a century and was inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, died at 82.
June 15 — Rodney Thomas, who played running back for the Houston Oilers, Tennessee Titans and Atlanta Falcons during a seven-year NFL career, died at 41.
Aug. 26 — George Barrett, a longtime Tennessee civil rights lawyer known for handling a case that ultimately desegregated the state's public colleges and universities,Jerseys Cheap NFL, died at 86. In a career that spanned more than 50 years, Barrett also represented corporate whistleblowers, fought for labor rights and tackled securities fraud.
May 18 — Don Meyer, one of the winningest coaches in college basketball who led his teams to the playoffs 19 times during a career spent mostly at Lipscomb University in Nashville and Northern State in South Dakota, died at 69.
Sept. 17 — Grand Ole Opry Member George Hamilton IV, who brought country music to Russia and Czechoslovakia and recorded the first country album in Eastern Europe, died at 77. Hamilton also hosted country-themed television shows in Britain and Canada.
Oct. 18 — Nashville songwriter and Hall of Famer Paul Craft died at the age of 76. Craft penned the words to songs made famous by Ray Stevens, Mark Chestnutt, Alison Krauss, the Eagles and Linda Rondstadt.
Nov. 29 — Steve Hershel Lake, a former publisher of the Cookeville Herald-Citizen, Carthage Courier and Pulaski Citizen and president of the Tennessee Press Association died at 75.
Dec. 21 — Paul Walther, who played six seasons in the NBA in the 1950s after a stellar college career at Tennessee, died at 87.
Sept. 21 — Former Tennessee Titans kicker Rob Bironas died at the age of 36 after a car accident near his Nashville home. Bironas was the fourth most-accurate kicker in NFL history. In nine seasons with the Titans, he finished as the team's second all-time leading scorer with 1,032 points, and he set a franchise record scoring triple digits in seven straight seasons. He also set an NFL record in 2011 in hitting a field goal from at least 40 yards in 10 consecutive games.
Sept. 1 — Jimi Jamison, who sang lead on Survivor hits such as "Burning Heart" and "Is This Love," died at 63 at his Memphis home.
June 26 — Howard Baker, the former Senate majority leader who famously asked during the Watergate hearings, "What did the president know and when did he know it?" died at 88. Baker's long political career included a time as chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan.
Dec. 20 — Longtime Nashville radio personality Teddy Bart, who was recently inducted into the Tennessee Radio Hall of Fame, died at the age of 78.
July 11 — John Seigenthaler, the journalist who edited The Tennessean newspaper, helped shape USA Today and worked for civil rights during the John F. Kennedy administration, died at his Nashville home at age 86. In his wide-ranging career, Seigenthaler also served on Robert Kennedy's presidential campaign and founded the First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.
March 25 — Gail Kerr, an outspoken columnist for The Tennessean newspaper in Nashville, died at 52.
May 9 — Harlan Mathews, who was appointed to the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Al Gore after Gore was elected vice president in 1992, died at 87.
Nov. 11 — Kingsport Circuit Court Judge and former Tennessee Sen,China NFL Jerseys. Mike Faulk died at 61. |
|