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  1. 26 kwi 2022 · William Anderson Hatfield II (1864-1930) aka Cap Hatfield, was the last of the Hatfields to die who was involved in the Hatfield-McCoy feud. (b. February 06, 1864, Mingo County, West Virginia, USA - d. August 21, 1930, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, USA)

  2. William Anderson Hatfield II (1864-1930) aka Cap Hatfield, was the last of the Hatfields to die who was involved in the Hatfield-McCoy feud. (b. February 06, 1864, Mingo County, West Virginia, USA - d. August 21, 1930, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, USA) Parents: He was the son of William Anderson...

  3. William Anderson Hatfield (September 9, 1839 – January 6, 1921), better known as "Devil Anse", was the patriarch of the Hatfield clan during the infamous Hatfield–McCoy feud which has since formed part of American folklore.

  4. 30 wrz 2013 · Although arrested and held in a Mingo County jail, Cap would later escape and was among the Hatfields being pursued by Randolph McCoy at the fight of “Devil’s Backbone”, a rocky crag which served as the Hatfield’s hideout. Escaping the bloody encounter, Cap disappeared.

  5. When William Anderson Hatfield II was born on 6 February 1864, in Mingo, West Virginia, United States, his father, William Anderson “Devil Anse” Hatfield, was 24 and his mother, Levicy Chafin, was 21. He married Sylvania Wolford in 1882. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter.

  6. 2 kwi 2014 · Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield led his family in their notorious and bloody feud with the McCoys during the late 1800s along the Kentucky-West Virginia border. Updated: Aug 13, 2020 11:38 AM...

  7. The first who fell before his unerring rifle, except in war, was in the sixties. Living in the border land where sentiment was divided, he espoused the cause of the South, made up a company, was elected its captain, and marched forth to honorable warfare, leaving a wife and family at home.

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