Advertisement

John A Crane

Advertisement

John A Crane

Birth
Louisiana, USA
Death
12 Sep 1907 (aged 37)
Denison, Grayson County, Texas, USA
Burial
Denison, Grayson County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Fallen peace officer. On October 11, 1901, around 1:00 AM, Denison Police Officer John Crane responded to a disturbance. George Puryear, 19, was complaining loudly that he had been robbed at a bawdy house by one of the women. Puryear and another man from the Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma) had been in town all day and were drinking heavily. As Officer Crane walked up to the scene, Puryear, who was on horseback, turned in his saddle and fired at Officer Crane. The bullet struck Crane in the leg above his knee. Puryear fled to the Indian Territory where he was shot and killed by a posse of officers from Denison, Sherman and Grayson County, Texas.
Crane recovered slowly and eventually returned to work on light duty as a police clerk. In May 1907 he became bedridden from the wound and had to leave the department. He died on September 12, 1907 from the effects of the wound. He was survived by his wife and two children. Officer Crane is memorialized at Panel: 55-W: 26 on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, DC.
Fallen peace officer. On October 11, 1901, around 1:00 AM, Denison Police Officer John Crane responded to a disturbance. George Puryear, 19, was complaining loudly that he had been robbed at a bawdy house by one of the women. Puryear and another man from the Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma) had been in town all day and were drinking heavily. As Officer Crane walked up to the scene, Puryear, who was on horseback, turned in his saddle and fired at Officer Crane. The bullet struck Crane in the leg above his knee. Puryear fled to the Indian Territory where he was shot and killed by a posse of officers from Denison, Sherman and Grayson County, Texas.
Crane recovered slowly and eventually returned to work on light duty as a police clerk. In May 1907 he became bedridden from the wound and had to leave the department. He died on September 12, 1907 from the effects of the wound. He was survived by his wife and two children. Officer Crane is memorialized at Panel: 55-W: 26 on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial in Washington, DC.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement