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  1. Walter Bullock (May 6, 1907, in Shelburn, Indiana – August 19, 1953, in Los Angeles, California) was an American song lyricist and screenwriter. He recorded with his brother, James Russell Lowell Bullock. On April 22, 1930, they released a record on the Champion label (16004).

  2. Walter Bullock. Soundtrack: Hit Parade of 1941. Songwriter ("Someday You'll Find Your Bluebird"), composer and author, educated at DePauw University (BA). He joined ASCAP in 1936, and his chief musical collaborators included Harold Spina, Alfred Newman, Richard Whiting, and Abraham Ellstein.

    • May 6, 1907
    • August 19, 1953
  3. Walter Bullock. Soundtrack: Hit Parade of 1941. Songwriter ("Someday You'll Find Your Bluebird"), composer and author, educated at DePauw University (BA). He joined ASCAP in 1936, and his chief musical collaborators included Harold Spina, Alfred Newman, Richard Whiting, and Abraham Ellstein.

    • Writer, Music Department, Soundtrack
    • May 6, 1907
    • Walter Bullock
    • August 19, 1953
  4. Contact Walter Bullock, your Farmers Insurance agent in Milton, WA 98354, specializing in Auto, Home, Business Insurance and more.

  5. Walter R. Bullock was born at Buffalo, New York, August 5th, 1899 where he attended grade school. He left Buffalo about 1908 and went with his family to Texas and then to Minneapolis, Minnesota, arriving there in the fall of 1911.

  6. Research into the life of Walter Bullock. known 11th February 1892. Walter Bullock was born in Macclesfield Forest in 1882, the son of Sarah (nee Whiston) and James Bullock, a farmer of Dimples Farm. In 1891, eight-year-old Walter was living at Dimples Farm with his parents and siblings Edith May (12), Ernest (11), Albert (9) and Sarah Bertha (7).

  7. Walter Bullock. (1907—1953) Quick Reference. (1907–1953). Stage and film lyricist and writer. A journeyman songwriter who collaborated with Richard A. Whiting, Victor Schertzinger, Jule Styne, and others, he scored three Shirley Temple movies and contributed ... From: Bullock, Walter in The Oxford Companion to the American Musical »

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