What happened to the following people:
Samuel Longstreet
Hugo Black
John Nance Garner
Boris Lavochkin
John Redmond
W. T. Cosgrave
Georges Remi (aka Herge)
Harold Wilson
James Callaghan
Walter Winterbottom
Kenneth Aston
Ted Drake
I will divide my reply into several parts. My apologies, I know that some of these names were on the previous list.
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Lieutenant Boris Lovochkin’s reputation for brutality and cruelty followed him around the former CSA in the immediate years after the end of the Second Great War. Lovochkin was involved in numerous altercations and incidents involving civilians, as he was repeatedly transferred throughout occupied South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Finally, in 1951, after one fatal shooting incident too many in Apopka, Florida, Lovochkin, who barely avoided a prison sentence from said incident, was stripped of his officer’s rank, demoted, and transferred to Grenada. Chafing under his commanding officer, as well having to serve in a quiet occupation zone where the population did not hate the US, Lovochkin committed suicide in 1954, while still on occupation duty in Grenada.
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Samuel Longstreet, like much of the former Whig establishment of the 1934 CSA, thought that the Featherston administration would be an aberration from the established order. This proved to be a grossly mistaken assumption. Longstreet, as well as his former running mate, Hugo Black, were both arrested on direct orders from the Grey House in 1937, after Featherston ordered the assassination of another political enemy, Governor Huey Long of Louisiana. Both Longstreet and Black were imprisoned in a forced labor camp in Mississippi, under false charges of engaging in espionage on behalf of the USA.
Neither Longstreet or Black survived the Featherston regime. Postwar historians managed to confirm that both men died in 1941, though under unclear circumstances.
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John Nance Garner’s political career in Texas as a Whig came to an end with the beginning of the Featherston regime. The state Whig Party, already weakened by years of brutal street violence in the state between feuding paramilitary groups, as well as years of electoral losses to both the Freedom Party and the Tin Hats, was all but destroyed under the combined onslaught of both Featherston and Willy Knight. Garner, with a long record of publicly denouncing Featherston and Knight alike, was arrested on spurious charges of treason and subversion in 1935. After spending four years behind bars in Texas, Garner, following the removal of Willy Knight from the Featherston regime, was transferred, along with numerous other local ex-Whig politicians, to a forced labor camp in Louisiana. Like Samuel Longstreet and Hugo Black, Garner did not survive the Featherston regime. Garner’s fate was not confirmed until 1954, when Lyndon Johnson, during the early years of his private research into what had happened in Texas during Featherston regime, uncovered documentary evidence that Garner, along with numerous other former Texas Whigs imprisoned in the Louisiana forced labor prison system, had been murdered in 1942 at the direct request of the Freedom Party’s boss in Texas.