CHARLOTTE HALL, Md.CHARLOTTE HALL, Md. — William Zantzinger, a wealthy Maryland landowner whose fatal beating of a black barmaid was recounted in a Bob Dylan protest song of the 1960s, was buried ...
Well, you can write a Talk of the Town for The New Yorker, which is what David Simon, Baltimore Sun reporter–turned–executive producer of The Wire and Generation Kill, did this week. Mr. Simon’s A ...
On a Friday night in February, William Zantzinger, the 24-year-old owner of a 630-acre tobacco farm, arrived drunk at a charity ball attended by members of high society in Baltimore, Maryland. Hattie ...
William Zantzinger, the man Bob Dylan made famous for "kill[ing] poor Hattie Carroll," has died. Zantzinger spent his life in the shadow of an early Dylan song, The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll, ...
"Dylan's portrait of William Zantzinger verges on the libelous. … That the song itself is a masterpiece of drama and wordplay does not excuse Dylan's distortions, and thirty-six years on he ...
William Devereux Zantzinger, whose six-month sentence in the fatal caning of a black barmaid named Hattie Carroll at a Balti-more charity ball moved Bob Dylan to write a dramatic song in 1963 that ...
William Zantzinger, 69, a wealthy Maryland landowner whose fatal beating of a black barmaid was recounted in a Bob Dylan protest song of the 1960s, was buried on the weekend. He died Jan. 3. The ...
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