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Meade McClanahan : ウィキペディア英語版 | Meade McClanahan
Meade McClanahan (1894?–1959) was an industrial engineer and businessman who was elected to the Los Angeles City Council in 1945 but was ousted by voters in 1946 based upon his support for controversial preacher and political organizer Gerald L.K. Smith. ==Biography== A native of Ohio, McClanahan was married to Beulah McClanahan on January 1, 1914, in Chillicothe, Ohio, and moved to Southern California around 1930, where, as an industrial engineer, he operated a foundry at 1423 Riverside Drive. The two separated in October 1954 and were divorced in January 1955 after Beulah McClanahan testified her husband used a "judo cut" on the back of her neck after watching wrestling on television. Mrs. McClanahan got the family home at 2325 Riverside Terrace at Riverside Drive,〔(Location of the McClanahan home on ''Mapping L.A.'' )〕 and her husband kept his business, the Ace Tank and Boiler Company of Maywood, California, which he operated with a son, Bernard.〔〔("Wife Divorces Former City Councilman," ''Los Angeles Times,'' January 5, 1955, page 2 )〕〔 He died at the age of 65 on October 5, 1959 of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease) after a long illness, in Glendale, leaving a wife, Alice Moore, an attorney; two sons, Bernard E. McClanahan of Whittier and Thomas Meade McClanahan of Los Angeles; and a daughter, Beverly N. Cabral of Los Angeles. Burial was at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale.〔("Obituaries," ''Los Angeles Times,'' October 9, 1959, page 32 )〕〔("Meade McClanahan, 65, Ex-Councilman, Dies," ''Los Angeles Times,'' October 7, 1959, page 4 )〕
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