Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Scott was a lead certified public accountant in Charlotte, North Carolina. He served as the director of the Division of Accounts in the State Department of Revenue from 1934 to his death in 1936. He was the father of Hollywood star Randolph Scott. Scott died in Raleigh on March 4, 1936.

  2. Jan 3, 2023 · March 04, 1936 (66) Raleigh, Wake, North Carolina, United States. Place of Burial: Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, United States. Immediate Family: Son of Tarlton Woodson Scott, Jr and Sarah E. Scott. Husband of Lucille Lavinia Scott.

    • Norfolk, Virginia
    • Lucille Lavinia Scott
    • Virginia
    • December 2, 1869
  3. The Scott House was built in 1926-27 by George Grant and Lucy Crane Scott, and was designed by the noted Charlotte architect Louis Asbury. The Scotts were the parents of film star Randolph Scott, who lived in the house as a young man and returned for frequent visits after achieving stardom.

    • 220KB
    • 10
  4. People also ask

  5. George Grant Scott. Birth. 2 Dec 1869. Franklin County, Virginia, USA. Death. 4 Mar 1936 (aged 66) Burial. Elmwood Cemetery. Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA Show Map.

  6. But it’s in Westerns that Scott truly stood out—riding tall in the saddle and creating his most enduring and unforgettable roles. Early Life George Randolph Scott was born on January 23, 1898, to Lucille Crane Scott and George Grant Scott in Orange County, Virginia. He was the second oldest of six children, with four sisters and one brother.

    • George Grant Scott1
    • George Grant Scott2
    • George Grant Scott3
    • George Grant Scott4
  7. Jul 4, 2017 · George Grant Scott. Born 2 Dec 1869 in Virginia, United States. Son of Tarlton Woodson Scott Jr. and [mother unknown] Brother of Robert Lee Scott. Husband of Lucy (Crane) Scott — married 24 Mar 1891 [location unknown] Father of George Randolph Scott. Died 4 Mar 1936 in Raleigh, Wake Co., North Carolina, United States.

  8. I n his classic work Lament for a Nation (2005c), George Grant famously pro- nounced that Canada had ceased to exist as a nation.1 It had been swept away, he claimed, by the forces of modernity that flooded across the American border after the Second World War.

  1. People also search for