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  1. Francis Marion Cockrell (October 1, 1834 – December 13, 1915) was a Confederate military commander and American politician from the state of Missouri. He served as a United States Senator from Missouri for five terms. He was a prominent member of the famed South–Cockrell–Hargis family of Southern politicians. Cockrell was born in Warrensburg, Missouri. His older brother was Jeremiah ...

  2. Francis Cockrell Confederate Army general (1834-1915) ... Marion Cockrell; Work location: Washington, D.C. Authority file Q1259413 ISNI: 0000 0000 4344 8914 VIAF ID: 31567690 Library of Congress authority ID: no93015817 US Congress Bio ID: C000576 U.S. ...

  3. Francis M. Cockrell. Highest Rated: 100% Inferno (1953) Lowest Rated: 100% Inferno (1953) Birthday: Dec 14, 1906. Birthplace: Warrensburg, Missouri, USA. Not to be confused with the similarly ...

  4. In the fall of 1872, when he was just eight years old, some citizens of Warrensburg, which included Francis Cockrell and others, raised money to send young Boone to the Missouri Institute for the Education of the Blind in St. Louis. Young Boone was only a student there a couple of years, but he returned to Warrensburg knowing how to play the piano by ear.

  5. Francis Marion Cockrell (1 October 1834-13 December 1915) was a Democratic US Senator from Missouri from 4 March 1875 to 3 March 1905, succeeding Carl Schurz and preceding William Warner. Francis Marion Cockrell was born in Warrensburg, Missouri in 1834, the brother of Jeremiah V. Cockrell. He practiced law in Warrensburg from 1855 to 1861, when he joined the Missouri State Guard as a captain ...

  6. American National Biography Online. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Cockrell, a slaveowner, organized a company of pro-southern Home Guards and was elected its captain. The group joined the army raised by Sterling Price to resist the Union occupation of Missouri and fought with him at Wilson's Creek (10 Aug. 1861) and Lexington (14-20 Sept ...

  7. Cockrell’s first published short story was co-authored with his older brother, Francis M. Cockrell, in 1932 (Blue Book). In 1956, the Cockrell’s again teamed up to contribute teleplays for two episodes in the first year of Alfred Hitchcock Presents (“A Bullet for Baldwin,” January 1, 1956, and “You Got to Have Luck,” January 15, 1956).