About: Roland Laurence South   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Captain Roland Laurence South was a graduate of West Point and considered a young up and comer in the US Army. With his bright future, South had made friends with a number of high ranking officers. However, Captain South had become disenchanted with President Joe Steele. He loudly expressed his displeasure, and 10 days after his promotion to Captain, attempted to assassinate Steele.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Roland Laurence South
rdfs:comment
  • Captain Roland Laurence South was a graduate of West Point and considered a young up and comer in the US Army. With his bright future, South had made friends with a number of high ranking officers. However, Captain South had become disenchanted with President Joe Steele. He loudly expressed his displeasure, and 10 days after his promotion to Captain, attempted to assassinate Steele.
dcterms:subject
type of appearance
  • Direct.
dbkwik:turtledove/...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Roland Laurence South
Cause of Death
  • Shot to death
Affiliations
Occupation
  • Soldier
Death
  • 1937(xsd:integer)
Birth
  • c. 1906
Nationality
novel or story
  • Novel only
abstract
  • Captain Roland Laurence South was a graduate of West Point and considered a young up and comer in the US Army. With his bright future, South had made friends with a number of high ranking officers. However, Captain South had become disenchanted with President Joe Steele. He loudly expressed his displeasure, and 10 days after his promotion to Captain, attempted to assassinate Steele. In March 1937, Steele spoke at the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Captain South arranged to be in the front row for the speech. He was quite agitated as he waited for Steele, wiggling around with his eyes wide open leading to reporter Charlie Sullivan to wonder if he was about to suffer an epileptic fit. When President Steele began speaking, South pulled out his service pistol and began firing. South fired twice at Steele, hitting and wounding him once, then a third wild round in his general direction and a fourth into the ceiling as he fell to the Secret Service's returned fire. Fortunately, President Steele survived with just a flesh wound that cracked a rib. The late Captain South's connections to high ranking officers led the creation of the Government Bureau of Investigation. The new Director J. Edgar Hoover charged a number of generals and admirals with treason and had a press conference at the Justice Department Building to parade the accused before reporters and the newsreel cameras. The middle aged men were in dark blue or khaki but all rank badges and emblems had been removed. The military trials were quick leading to convictions and executions and with follow-up charges against others from evidence uncovered. This led to the clearing of wreckers from the military.
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