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Stephen Earnest Aguirre (1892-1972) —
also known as Stephen E. Aguirre —
of El Paso, El Paso
County, Tex.
Born in Tucson, Pima
County, Ariz., November
11, 1892.
U.S. Vice Consul in Ciudad Juarez, 1917-20; Chihuahua, 1920; Manzanillo, 1921-24; Nuevo Laredo, 1925-27, 1927-29; Piedras Negras, 1927; Mexico City, 1929-32; U.S. Consul in Ciudad Juarez, as of 1943.
Mexican,
Scottish,
English, French,
and German
ancestry.
Died, from an aortic
aneurysm, in Southwestern General Hospital,
El Paso, El Paso
County, Tex., November
19, 1972 (age 80 years, 8
days).
Interment at Restlawn
Memorial Park, El Paso, Tex.
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Relatives: Son
of Stephen Monroe Aguirre and Mary Wilhelmina (Sneed) Aguirre;
married to Jeannette Adelina Krause. |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: U.S. passport application
(1920) |
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John Sidney McCain III (1936-2018) —
also known as John S. McCain —
of Tempe, Maricopa
County, Ariz.; Phoenix, Maricopa
County, Ariz.
Born in Coco Solo, Canal Zone (now Cativá, Panama),
August
29, 1936.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War; U.S.
Representative from Arizona 1st District, 1983-87; U.S.
Senator from Arizona, 1987-; candidate for Republican nomination
for President, 2000;
candidate for President
of the United States, 2008.
Episcopalian.
Scotch-Irish
and English ancestry.
Died in Cornville, Yavapai
County, Ariz., August
25, 2018 (age 81 years, 361
days).
Interment at Naval
Academy Cemetery, Annapolis, Md.
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Relatives: Son
of John S. McCain, Jr. and Roberta (Wright) McCain; married, July 3,
1965, to Carol Shepp; married, May 17,
1980, to Cindy Lou Hensley. |
| | Campaign slogan (2008): "Country
first." |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Ballotpedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Internet Movie Database
profile — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
| | Books by John McCain: Faith
of My Fathers (1999) — Worth
the Fighting for: A Memoir, with Mark Salter (2002) —
Why
Courage Matters : The Way to a Braver Life, with Mark Salter
(2004) — Hard
Call: The Art of Great Decisions, with Mark Salter
(2008) |
| | Books about John McCain: Robert
Timberg, John
McCain : An American Odyssey — Paul Alexander, Man
of the People: The Life of John McCain — Scott Farris,
Almost
President: The Men Who Lost the Race but Changed the
Nation |
| | Critical books about John McCain: Cliff
Schecter, The
Real McCain: Why Conservatives Don't Trust Him and Why Independents
Shouldn't — David Brock and Paul Waldman, Free
Ride : John McCain and the Media — Matt Welch, McCain
: The Myth of a Maverick |
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Samuel Frederick Noon (1879-1966) —
also known as S. Fred Noon —
of Nogales, Santa Cruz
County, Ariz.; San Diego, San Diego
County, Calif.
Born in San Jose, Santa Clara
County, Calif., November
3, 1879.
Republican. Lawyer;
U.S. Vice & Deputy Consul in Nogales, as of 1905; delegate to Republican National Convention
from Arizona, 1920
(member, Resolutions
Committee).
English ancestry.
Died September
20, 1966 (age 86 years, 321
days).
Burial location unknown.
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