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・ Black December
・ Black Deep
・ Black Denim Lit
・ Black Denim Trousers and Motorcycle Boots
・ Black Desert
・ Black Deutschland
・ Black Devil (disambiguation)
・ Black Devil Disco Club
・ Black Devon
・ Black Dialogue
・ Black Diamond
・ Black Diamond (Angie Stone album)
・ Black Diamond (Bee Gees song)
・ Black Diamond (buffalo)
・ Black Diamond (Buraka Som Sistema album)
Black Diamond (elephant)
・ Black Diamond (Kiss song)
・ Black Diamond (library)
・ Black Diamond (roller coaster)
・ Black Diamond (Stan Ridgway album)
・ Black Diamond (Stratovarius song)
・ Black Diamond (The Rippingtons album)
・ Black Diamond (train)
・ Black Diamond Australian Football League
・ Black Diamond Bay
・ Black Diamond Bay (UK)
・ Black Diamond Cemetery
・ Black Diamond Cheese
・ Black Diamond Coal Mining Railroad
・ Black Diamond Conference


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Black Diamond (elephant) : ウィキペディア英語版
Black Diamond (elephant)
Black Diamond (1898-1929) was an Indian elephant owned by the Al G. Barnes Circus.
==History==
Weighing nine tons, he was believed to be the largest Indian elephant in captivity. A good worker but prone to fits of temper, he was generally kept chained to two calm female elephants during parades through the towns the circus visited. On October 12, 1929, while being unloaded in Corsicana, Texas, Black Diamond went on a rampage, injuring his long-time former trainer, H. D. (Curley) Pritchett, and killing Pritchett's current employer, Eva Speed Donohoo (or Donohue).
Ms. Donohoo was not the first person Black Diamond had killed, so after his recapture he was deemed too dangerous to continue with the circus and the decision was made to put him down. Numerous ideas were floated but his size made most of them unworkable; the final decision was to shoot him. As many as 50, perhaps more than 100, shots were required before Black Diamond died.
His mounted head, on display in a museum in Houston, Texas for many years, was eventually acquired by a local Corsicana businessman, Carmack Watkins, who had been a five-year-old boy in the crowd that day in October 1929. Allegedly, one of his feet was made into a pedestal for a bust of Hans Nagle, Houston's first zookeeper, the man who fired the final shot that brought Black Diamond down. Another one of his legs is on display in the old post office in the ghost town, Helena, TX.
In 2006, singer/songwriter Al Evans wrote "Black Diamond's Song," a lament from the pachyderm's perspective. ()

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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