- Lava Beds, the Tenderloin,
White Chapel, or Wappyville, (after
Charles Wappenstein,
after a
particularly corrupt police chief.),
where low entertainment...
-
James O'Neill 1901–1905
Lawton Oklahoma police chief Heck
Thomas 1902 CW
Wappenstein,
chief of the
police department,
Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition, Seattle...
- John Considine, his
intended victim. In 1911,
Police Chief Charles W.
Wappenstein was
ousted by a reform-minded mayor. He was
convicted on
state charges...
- in 1910 on an "open city" platform. He re-appointed
Charles "Wappy"
Wappenstein,
previously dismissed for corruption, as
chief of police.
Their administration...
-
mayor for
which West
Seattle was hoping. Gill's
chief of police,
Charles Wappenstein, was
tasked with
controlling the
restricted district.
Instead he took...
- A
sculpted coat of arms (
Wappenstein),
probably 17th century, from the old
parish church; now in the
porch of the new church...
-
chief of
police Charles "Wappy"
Wappenstein, whom Gill's
predecessor John F.
Miller had
dismissed as corrupt.
Wappenstein promptly established a regime...
-
laborer was
suspected in the
attack and
according to
Police chief Charles Wappenstein there were
reports of at
least 5 "roughly dressed" men seen near the...
- Matrei/Brenner,
Tyrol – 2010 Vienna)
Oskar Thiede (1879 – 1961)
Ascher Wappenstein (about 1780 Kraków,
today in
Poland -) Carl
Waschmann (1848 – 1905)[citation...
- O'Day, USA Chief-of-Staff: Col.
Filomeno B.
Villaluz / Col.
William A.
Wappenstein G-1: Capt.
Antonio Torres G-2: Capt.
Ismael Lapuz G-3: Capt. Francisco...