Who were the famous people that died in 2016?

Who were the famous people that died in 2016?

Remembering Muhammad Ali, Prince, Patty Duke, Edward Albee, Pat Summitt, Gene Wilder, Phyllis Schlafly, David Bowie, Elie Wiesel, Shimon Peres, Nancy Reagan, Arnold Palmer, Harper Lee and others who died this year.

Who died in 2014 Famous?

Celebrity Deaths 2014

Russell Johnson January 16 Dave Madden January 16 Shirley Temple Black February 10
Jim Lange February 25 David Brenner March 15 Bob Hoskins April 29
Casey Kasem June 15 Eli Wallach June 24 Robin Williams August 11
Bob Crewe September 11 Geoffrey Holder October 05 Billie Whitelaw December 21

What artists died in 2018?

Nancy Wilson

  • Sonny Fortune.
  • XXXTentacion.
  • The Staple Singers.
  • Mac Miller.
  • Khaira Arby.
  • Motörhead.
  • Randy Weston.
  • Frightened Rabbit.

Who died in 2016 Wikipedia?

1

  • William Harrison Bell, 89, American surgeon.
  • Leonard Boyle, 85, New Zealand Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Dunedin (1983–2005).
  • Agostino Coletto, 88, Italian racing cyclist.
  • David Daniell, 87, English literary scholar.
  • Roger Enrico, 71, American businessman (PepsiCo, DreamWorks), snorkeling incident.

What happened December 31st 2015?

Comedian Bill Cosby, 78, was charged with sexual assault in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday. The accuser worked with the basketball team at Temple University, Cosby’s alma mater. She said Cosby became a mentor and friend, then drugged and sexually abused her at his home in 2004.

Who famous died on December 31?

Next most famous people who died on December 31

  • #2 Gustave Courbet. Thursday, June 10, 1819 – Monday, December 31, 1877.
  • #3 Commodus. Monday, August 31, 161 – Monday, December 31, 192.
  • #4 Ricky Nelson.
  • #5 Catherine of Braganza.
  • #6 Natalie Cole.
  • #7 Betty White.
  • #8 Roberto Clemente.
  • #9 Richard Montgomery.

Which was the number one cause of death in 2016 in the United States?

In 2016, the 10 leading causes of death (heart disease, cancer, unintentional injuries, chronic lower respiratory diseases, stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, influenza and pneumonia, kidney disease, and suicide) remained the same as in 2015, although two causes exchanged ranks.