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Grover Jones (November 15, 1893 – September 24, 1940) was an American screenwriter - often teamed with William Slavens McNutt - and film director. He wrote more than 100 films between 1920 and his death.
Grover Jones (November 15, 1893 – September 24, 1940) was an American screenwriter - often teamed with William Slavens McNutt - and film director. He wrote more than 104 films between 1920 and his death.
One of the most famous trials to take place in the Clay County Courthouse resulted from Welby Lee’s 18-year quest to locate the men responsible for the hit and run death of his father, Newt Lee, in 1944. Newt Lee was a Clay County farmer and a lumber merchant.
Famed Monroe Diamond Discovered Dies at 84 Grover Cleveland Jones, Sr., 84, a well known Monroe Countian, retired teacher, co-finder of the famous "Punch Jones" diamond, and nationally known for his consecutive sons and one daughter, died suddenly at his home Friday following an apparent heart attack.
Grover Jones was born on 15 November 1893 in Rosedale, Indiana, USA. He was a writer and director, known for The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935), Heir-Loons (1925) and Putting It Over (1922). He was married to Suzanne Avery. He died on 24 September 1940 in Hollywood, California, USA.
- Writer, Director, Editor
- November 15, 1893
- Grover Jones
- September 24, 1940
Grover Jones thereby became the first African American honored with a plaque in Cooperstown. He put in three years at Ithaca and spent his fourth year doing practical work in physiotherapy in New York City, with a thought towards a career in sports medicine.
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HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Sept. 24-- Grover Jones, who as a boy ran away from the Indiana coal mines to grow up with the motion-picture industry and to hold for nearly three decades top rank among ...