Millard F. Singleton

He held posts as Justice of the Peace, storekeeper in the United States Internal Revenue Service,[1] recorder of deeds for the city, and as bailiff of the municipal court.

[5] Guy's daughter, Constance, married Nebraska congressman John Adams, Jr. Millard Singleton died Sunday, November 12, 1939 in Omaha.

[13] In the mid-1890s, two cases against black men in Omaha received great attention: the murder of Maude Rubel and the Rock Island train crash near Lincoln.

[14] In 1895, he was named a Justice of the Peace in the Eighth Ward in Omaha and was the Republican nominee for a seat in the state legislature to replace M. O. Ricketts in 1896, but lost.

[18] On the evening of April 16, 1930, two men placed an iron cross covered with oil-soaked burlap on the lawn of Singleton's son, John, and set it afire.