This is a list of human deaths caused by snakebites in the United States by decade in reverse chronological order. These fatalities have been documented through news media, reports, cause-of-death statistics, scientific papers, or other sources.
Snake species
The United States has about 30 species of venomous snakes, which include 23 species of rattlesnakes, three species of coral snakes, and four species of American moccasins. Although at least one species of venomous snake is found in every state except Hawaii, Maine, Rhode Island and Alaska, the vast majority are found in warm weather states.
Roughly 7,000–8,000 people are bitten by venomous snakes each year in the United States, and about five of those people die.[4] Though most fatal bites are attributed to rattlesnakes, the copperhead accounts for more snakebites than any other venomous North American species. Rattlesnake bites are roughly four times as likely to result in serious injury or death as a copperhead bite.[5]
Colorado, Colorado Springs — Currat was bitten while riding his bike with his family in Bluestem Prairie Open Space. He collapsed immediately and paramedics were summoned. Despite medical treatment, he died five days later at Children's Hospital Colorado.[7]
Texas, Freer — DeLeon, a "veteran snake handler" with Snake Busters Snake Handlers was bitten by a rattlesnake on April 30, 2022, while performing at an annual show in Freer, according to his family. DeLeon was flown to a hospital in Corpus Christi where he later died.
January 19, 2022
David Riston, 49, male
Unknown
Maryland, Pomfret — Riston was found dead in his home in which he kept 124 snakes including black mambas, cobras, and rattlesnakes. The Maryland Department of Health confirmed that he died of snake envenomation.[8]
Georgia, Waverly — Meridith was bitten by a rattlesnake while in a friend's garden on May 17 when she went to sit down. She was in a medically induced coma for several weeks until her death on June 12. Meridith was not able to receive antivenom due to her allergies, which doctors said would have put her life at risk.
Alabama, Winston County — Baker was at his home near Lewis Smith Lake when he was bitten by a copperhead snake and lost consciousness within 2 minutes. CPR was performed and he was taken to a local hospital in critical condition. Baker was later airlifted to Huntsville Hospital, where he died on May 27.[9][10]
June 4, 2018
Lawrence Walters, 70, male
Rattlesnake
South Dakota, Lawrence County, Spearfish — Walters was playing golf at the Elkhorn Ridge Golf Course in Spearfish. He was looking for a ball in tall grass when he was bitten on the ankle. He was rushed back to the clubhouse in a cart where another employee performed CPR until an ambulance arrived, but was pronounced dead at Spearfish hospital.[11]
April 29, 2018
Barry Lester, 57, male
Rattlesnake
Oklahoma, Osage County — Lester was driving down a road when he spotted the rattlesnake. He tried to move it to safety but was bitten on both hands. Lester collapsed shortly thereafter and was pronounced dead.[12]
October 7, 2017
Daniel Hohs, 31, male
Rattlesnake
Colorado — Hohs was bitten on the ankle while hiking near Golden. He was taken to a local hospital in critical condition and was pronounced dead the following day.[13]
South Carolina — Grooms was in the Santee National Wildlife Refuge when a rattlesnake bit his lower left leg.[14] He collapsed and died within 15 minutes. He may have had an undisclosed condition which contributed to the severity of his reaction to the bite.[15]
Kentucky — Brock, a preacher from Stoney Fork,[16] was bitten in the left arm during a religious service at the Mossie Simpson Pentecostal Church in Jenson, Kentucky. He refused treatment and died in his brother's home.[17]
Pennsylvania — Davis was sitting by a fire at his family's camp in Elk County when he was bitten by a rattlesnake. He was taken to a hospital and from there airlifted to a Pittsburgh-area hospital. While in the helicopter, Davis suffered a cardiac arrest and was subsequently pronounced dead upon arrival to the hospital. The cause of death was an anaphylactic reaction from the snake's venom. No autopsy was performed and the death was ruled accidental.[18]
Texas — Thompson was found unresponsive in his car in a Lowe's store parking lot in Austin. He was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. A monocled cobra that he was known to own was missing and was later found dead nearby, having been run over by a car [19] An autopsy was performed and Thompson's death was ruled a suicide.[20]
Missouri — De Leon was bitten on each leg while wading in the James River near Nixa. After the bite, he did not seek medical attention and died the next day. The county coroner stated the cause of death listed on the death certificate states "Undetermined" because De Leon also had a lethal level of the narcotic oxycodone in his system, along with alcohol and a non-lethal level of hydrocodone.[21]
Georgia — Giles, of Watkinsville was bitten while he was alone in Arnoldsville. He normally carried a snakebite kit but did not have it with him this time. He drove to a nearby house to seek help, and collapsed.[22]
Missouri — While camping at Sam A. Baker State Park, Levins walked outside, saw a snake, and brought it to his son's attention. When he picked it up, the snake bit him. Levins walked back into the cabin, washed his hand at the kitchen sink and sat down on the couch. When he became sick, someone from a neighboring cabin came over to help and performed CPR. Levins was later pronounced dead at an area hospital.[23]
June 20, 2014
Brayden Bullard, 4, male
Timber rattlesnake
Florida — Bitten while planting watermelons in his backyard in Bryceville.[24] He was rushed to the hospital, but died 2 weeks later[25]
Kentucky — Coots was bitten on the right hand during a service at his Full Gospel Tabernacle in Jesus Name church in Middlesboro. After the bite, Coots dropped the snakes, but then picked them back up and continued the ceremony. Later, he was driven to his home. When paramedics arrived, his relatives refused medical treatment for him, saying it was inconsistent with his religion. He died at home.
September 20, 2013
Daniel Frank Mitchell, 53, male
Rattlesnake (probably eastern diamondback, but possibly timber)
Georgia — Burch found the snake in his garage in Armuchee, Georgia. Not wanting to kill it, he tried moving it out with a broom but lost his balance, fell on top of the snake, and was bitten on his left arm. He was rushed to the hospital and received eight vials of antivenom, but died 30 hours later.[28]
October 2, 2012
Jack Redmond, 70, male
Unknown
Virginia — He was likely killed by one of the 24 venomous snakes he kept in his home in Chesterfield.[29]
Missouri — Brown died of a heart attack one day after he was bitten by a copperhead snake while camping on the Current River, Missouri. The coroner's office listed the cause of death as a heart attack, with the snake bite as a contributing factor. Witnesses told investigators that Brown had seen a snake in one of the tents and was trying to remove it when the snake bit him on the right thumb.[30]
West Virginia — Wolford was bitten on the thigh while handling a timber rattlesnake as part of an outdoor religious service at Panther State Forest in McDowell County.[31][32] Wolford did not initially seek medical treatment for his injury, but was taken to Bluefield Regional Medical Center when his condition began to deteriorate some eight hours later.[31] Wolford was a pastor and often handled his pet snake during church services.[31] Wolford's father, Mack Wolford, died in 1983 under similar circumstances.[33]
Tennessee — Westbrook was bitten just above the right elbow while handling a copperhead; he had been attempting to determine the snake's sex.[36] According to witnesses, he "tried to extract the venom with a tool after he was bitten, then he began coughing and vomiting before he collapsed."[37] Westbrook was pronounced dead on arrival at Erlanger Hospital in Chattanooga.[37] The cause of death was determined to be "anaphylactic shock as a result of the snake bite." Westbrook had been bitten previously by a Copperhead, which may have made him hypersensitive to snake venom.[37]
California — Price was bitten above the right ankle while wading across a stream near Cuyamaca Reservoir in Cuyamaca, California.[38] He had been taking part in a study of steelhead trout that was funded by a state Department of Fish and Game grant.[38] According to witnesses, Price "stopped breathing within minutes" of being bitten. The bite marks on his foot were reportedly an inch and a half across.[38] Price was airlifted to Palomar Medical Center, but later died.
Aug. 11, 2010
Peyton Hood, 1, female
Western diamondback rattlesnake
Texas — Accidentally stepped on baby Western Diamondback while climbing down ladder at Possum Kingdom Lake. The snake struck her main artery.[39] She was rushed to the hospital, but died within a few hours.[40]
May 21, 2010
Eddie Lee Dorminey, 82, male
Rattlesnake
Georgia, Enigma — Dorminey was changing a lawnmower belt when he was bitten several times on his wrist.[41]
May 9, 2010
George Yancy, 35, male
Rattlesnake (probably western diamondback, but possibly timber)
Texas — Yancy was bitten while pulling up his pants in Smithville.[35]
North Carolina — After being treated for a presumed Timber rattlesnake bite (due to species endemic to the area and bite characteristics) she received on her right leg while trimming weeds in her yard on or about Friday, May 23, 2008, Summers spent the night in a local ERICU and returned home the following day with aftercare instructions. Summers was discovered dead in her Marion home a few days later on Memorial Day, May 26, 2008, apparently due to complications from the bite.
Texas — Bitten on his right thumb at his mobile house. The canebrake rattlesnake that bit him was one of 179 snakes he kept and bred in various containers and 84 of the snakes were venomous species.[43]
Georgia — Hiler was bitten on his left hand while attempting to cut off the rattles from what he thought was a dead snake that he came across in the road while driving near Cleveland. Medical help was summoned immediately but took 45 minutes to arrive. He survived in intensive care for 42 days before succumbing to the effects. He was reportedly very allergic to bee stings and poison ivy.[45]
Florida — Hernandez-Hernandez became the first person to die in the United States from a fatal coral snake bite since 1967. He and Jesus Moreida, both of Bonita Springs, were bitten by a coral snake they tried to kill.[47]
Florida — Guidry, the Putnam County, fire marshal, went to help a neighbor who had spotted a rattlesnake while mowing grass. He shot at the snake; it went under a shed, and Guidry was bitten when he reached for it.[48]
Alabama — Leprette was bitten on each hand while swimming in Saugahatchee Creek near Loachapoka, on June 16, 2004. He was admitted to East Alabama Medical Center in Opelika; he developed complications and died after several days of treatment.[55]
Virginia — Rev. Dwayne Long was bitten in a finger by a rattlesnake during a religious service at his church in Rose Hill, Lee County on April 11, 2004. He did not seek medical treatment and died the next day.[56][57]
Ohio — Peterman, a 14-year veteran of the Dayton, OhioFire Department, an "experienced snake and lizard collector and the 'go to' guy for the facility's envenomation issues", was bitten by a rhinoceros viper from his personal collection. He was taken to UC Medical Center / University Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, and died the following day due to an ostensible / reported inability to locate the requisite antivenin for the species, despite the likelihood of what should have been normal bite protocol preparation / supply storage for a collector of Peterman's reputation and stature as well as his affiliation with the Dayton, OhioEMS / Fire Department and his close proximity to the Cincinnati Zoo, which housed a significant herpetological collection of its own. The rhino viper was removed and rehoused with the Kentucky Reptile Zoo in Slade, KY, after Peterman's death. Peterman's relatively close proximity to both of those facilities along with established and experienced airlift antivenin sharing protocols and what should have been adequate rhino viper antivenin supplies should have served Peterman's immediate antivenin needs as well as outreach support to cover supplies while searching for addition antivenin should such prove necessary, yet for whatever undetermined and/or undisclosed reasons extant at the time, such supplies were unavailable. It is noteworthy to mention that the handler who removed the rhino viper from Peterman's collection and transferred it to the Slade, Kentucky collection was very experienced in handling venomous exotics and in fact this particular species itself, yet the snake even presented as considerably problematic to this experienced handler as well.
Arizona — Hughes was bitten on the finger by a small snake in his own garage. He was admitted to Sierra Vista Regional Health Center in Sierra Vista, and treated with antivenom, but died of "complications associated with the bite".[59]
Georgia — McIntosh, of Folkston, was doing laundry inside her home on August 31, 2001, when she was bitten. According to Ray Morgan, director of emergency management services for Charlton County, McIntosh ran nearly a half mile to a neighbor's house to call authorities because she didn't have a telephone. The snake escaped, so EMS officials could not determine what type it was other than to establish that it was a crotalid (pit viper). McIntosh was flown to Shands Hospital in Jacksonville, where she later succumbed to the effects of the envenomation.
Tennessee — Darrell Fee, a resident of Rose Hill, Virginia, was bitten in the chest by a timber rattlesnake during a religious service at a church near LaFollette. He did not seek medical treatment and did not want the authorities in the area to find out about the snakebite he received. He later died from the snakebite.[61]
Alabama — Brown was bitten while handling rattlesnake during a religious service in Macedonia. He had reportedly survived 22 previous snake bites. Brown's wife, Melinda, had been killed by a snake during a religious service three years earlier, in August 1995. The Browns left five children orphaned.[63]
Kentucky — Brown was bitten while handling a snake during a religious service in Middlesboro, on August 6, 1995. She died two days later. Brown's husband, John Wayne "Punkin" Brown, was killed by snake during a religious service in 1998.[67]
Kentucky — Saylor, a Pentecostal preacher, was bitten while handling a rattlesnake during a religious service in Bell County. Saylor figured prominently in David Kimbrough's 2002 book, Taking Up Serpents: Snake Handlers of Eastern Kentucky[68]
Georgia — Hale was bitten on the hand while removing a rattlesnake from a box during a religious service in Enigma.[69] He refused medical treatment and died nine hours later at his home.[70]
Maryland — Mr. West, who resided in Emmitsburg, had a state permit to keep more than two dozen snakes. He was tending an Indian Cobra in his basement when the snake bit him on the foot. Five minutes later he went into cardiac arrest and never awoke. He was pronounced dead an hour later at Frederick Memorial Hospital.[71][72]
West Virginia — Johnson, a resident of Galax, Virginia, was bitten twice in his left wrist by a timber rattlesnake in the Church of the Lord Jesus in Jolo. He refused medical treatment and died thirteen hours later.[73]
Tennessee — Jimmy Ray Williams Jr, a resident of Spring Creek, North Carolina, died after being bitten by a timber rattlesnake during a religious service in the House of Prayer in Jesus Name in Morristown. His father died in 1973 after drinking strychnine during a religious service in the nearby Carson Springs Holiness Church in Jesus Name.[74]
Georgia — Arnold Lee Loveless died after being bitten in the jaw by a rattlesnake during a religious service at the Church of Jesus Christ in Cartersville.[61][75]
Florida — Davison was bitten on the top of his right hand as he transferred a six-foot rattlesnake from one cage to another at Silver Springs Nature Park near Ocala.[76]
Kentucky — Shirley McLeary of Toledo, Ohio died seven hours after being bitten multiple times by an Eastern diamondback rattlesnake during a religious service for her uncle's funeral in Baxter. She did not seek medical treatment, as the other church members were praying to perform a "faith-healing attempt" on her.[78]
August 19, 1985
Charles Herman Prince, 47, male
Unknown
Tennessee — Rev. Charles Prince of Canton, North Carolina was bitten multiple times by a snake during a religious service in the Apostolic Church of God near Greeneville. He also drank strychnine during that religious service.[79] He refused medical treatment and died 36 hours later.[80][81]
Georgia — Richard Barrett was bit by rattlesnake while handling five venomous snakes during a religious service at Wade's Chapel in Cartersville. He refused medical treatment, was taken to the pastor's home nearby the church, died approximately seven hours later.[82]
West Virginia — Wolford was bitten on the arm by a timber rattlesnake during religious services at the Lord Jesus Temple in Mile Branch, near Iaeger.[33] Wolford did not initially seek medical treatment.[83] An ambulance was summoned eight hours after Wolford had been bitten, but he died during transport to Stevens Clinic in Welch, West Virginia.[33] Wolford's son, Mark Wolford, died in 2012 under similar circumstances.[31]
West Virginia — Reverend Holbrook was bitten while handling a rattlesnake during religious services in Oceana.[33][84] Holbrook reportedly refused medical assistance because his religion did not permit it.[33][84]
West Virginia — Rev. Williams, of Columbus, Ohio, was bitten while handling a snake during a religious service in Switzer, on April 4, 1974.[89]
October 28, 1973
Shirley Wagers, 72, male
Rattlesnake
Kentucky — Wagers was bitten by a rattlesnake during a religious service in the Pentecostal Holiness Church near London. He died from the bite nearly eight hours later at his home.[90]
New York — Ball was presumably bitten by a snake, possibly a massasauga, while traveling alone through Bergen-Byron Swamp on a "picture-taking expedition".[91] A five-day police search recovered Ball's body from a small clearing "near Warboys Road, on the swamp's northern perimeter."[91] An autopsy report listed snakebite as the presumptive cause of death.[91][92]
West Virginia — Bucklen, of Charleston, West Virginia, was bitten while handling a snake during a religious service in Fraziers Bottom, on September 16, 1972. She died eight days later.[93]
Florida — While driving near St. Augustine, Gaboury had stopped to relieve herself in the bushes beside the road. Thinking she had been pricked by a spiny plant, possibly the Spanish bayonet, she went to the emergency room, where she was treated for an allergic reaction and released. She returned home and was found dead the next morning. A snake expert determined from the size of the bite that Gaboury had likely been bitten by a diamondback rattler.[94]
Louisiana — Bristow had been collecting snakes in a bag when he was bitten on the hand by a cottonmouth moccasin in Garyville, on December 29, 1971.[95]
California — An experienced herpetologist, Dickinson was bitten while force-feeding an 8-foot Indian king cobra in Santa Ana, on July 10, 1966. Dickinson had previously survived bites from other cobras, rattlesnakes, a cottonmouth and a Gila monster.[97]
Arizona — Bitten on a finger of his left hand by Mojave rattlesnake while collecting specimens near Klondyke, on August 29, 1965. Shannon was one of the foremost American herpetologists, a physician and an expert on snakebite, having coauthored a manual for the U.S. armed services. He died on August 31, 1965, after being airlifted to a hospital in Los Angeles.[98]
Utah — De Bary, the director of the Salt Lake City Zoo, was bitten on the left forearm by a South African puff adder when he opened the cage to tend to the animal.[100]
West Virginia — Hagerman was bitten on the right thumb during her first snake handling at a church service in Jolo. She declined medical assistance and died at her parents' home. Her parents had previously been bitten several times by copperheads and rattlesnakes, recovering each time without seeking treatment. Her older brother, Dewey Chafin, has been bitten by various venomous snakes over 100 times throughout his life[101] and died in 2015 at age 82.[102]
Georgia — Hill, a pastor, was fatally bitten by a rattlesnake during a religious service at the New River Holiness Church in northwestern Berrien County.[104]
Alabama — Rev. Henson, described as an "elderly minister" in the Free Holiness Church, was bitten on the hand while handling a rattlesnake during a religious service in Robinwood. Relatives report that he had been handling snakes for "more than 30 years" and that he had survived several bites during that time.[105]
Miller, a 13-year-old boy from Bluffton, South Carolina, was reportedly bitten by a rattlesnake around June 4, 1958, and then succumbed to the effects of the bite 6 days later on June 10 at a nearby Ridgeland, South Carolina hospital, according to SC Certificate of Death #58008751.
Illinois — Schmidt, a renowned herpetologist, died in Chicago while documenting the effects of a venomous bite of a snake he was trying to identify. The snake was later identified as a juvenile African boomslang.[106]
Raub, an 18-year-old woman from LaPlace, Louisiana, was bitten by an Indian Cobra on July 5, 1956, after handling the animal unsupervised at a LaPlace, Louisiana "Snake Farm" roadside attraction managed by her uncle. Raub succumbed to the effects of the bite several hours later in an iron lung at Charity Hospital in New Orleans, Louisiana. In an effort to save Raub, Bill Haast boarded a Navy jet in Miami and attempted to reach Raub in Louisiana in time for a blood transfusion but Raub died shortly after the jet took off.
Tennessee — Bitten on the arm while handling a rattlesnake during a religious service in Savannah, on August 29, 1955. Her brother, Mansel Covington, a well-known snake handler, was bitten on both hands during the same service but survived. The event is recounted in writer Dennis Covington's 1995 book, Salvation on Sand Mountain.[107]
Florida — Hensley died from a bite sustained while handling snakes during a religious service.
March 6, 1955
Frieda Hoxter, 25, female
Cobra
Maryland — A German immigrant to the U.S., performing as "Princess Naja" at a night club in Baltimore, was bitten by one of two cobras she used in her performance. She died at St. Joseph's Hospital, where she had been hospitalized previously for earlier snakebites.[108][109]
South Carolina — 9-year-old Elouise Orr was bitten by a rattlesnake while at her home near Ridgeland, according to SC Death Certificate Record. The attending physician noted that they began treating Elouise at approximately 9 am, one hour after the bite occurred, and that she succumbed to the effects of the bite 10 hours later at around 7 pm.
California — 15-month-old Perry was playing in the backyard of her home in Tujunga, when she was bitten on the hand by a "pencil thin", 18-inch-long rattlesnake.[112]
South Carolina — Certificate of Death indicates individual was bit on July 30, 1952, in Beaufort, while working on a farm. Thornton died the next day at a Ridgeland, SC hospital.
California — Wiley, an experienced herpetologist, who was known as the "Queen of the Cobras" for her work in the movie industry, was posing for a photograph with a juvenile cobra when she was bitten after a flashbulb startled the snake. Cypress.[116]
Ohio — Mrs. Butterbaugh was bitten by a timber rattler at her home on Piney Creek, 12 miles east of Chillicothe, Ohio near the Tar Hollow State Forest. She was picking beans in her garden when she was bitten. She died the next day. This is the last known fatality from a wild snake bite in the state of Ohio.[117]
September 4, 1945
Anna Kirk, 26, Female
Unknown
Virginia — Anna Kirk, the husband of Rev. Harvey Kirk, died three days after she got bit in the wrist thrice on September 1, 1945, during a religious service in the Faith Holiness Church in Stone Creek. She was going into labor just before dying without a physician present and her baby also died. Afterward, Rev. Kirk was arrested, convicted of involuntary manslaughter, and sentenced to three months in prison.[16]
South Dakota — Dr. Emerson, a nationally known soil expert, was found dead on a trail eight miles west of Rapid City. Bitten on the left leg by a snake, Dr. Emerson had applied a tourniquet below the knee and made an incision over the wound with razor blade before he died.[124]
South Carolina — The Columbia Record article states that Ace Hargrove, a farmer near Clio, was bitten by a rattlesnake while picking blackberries in a field near his home. The article, dated June 29, 1937, mentions that Hargrove initially thought he was stung by a wasp but then saw the snake as it slithered away. The certificate of death offers a slightly different account, stating that Hargrove was picking berries on the bank of a ditch near his home when he was bit on the right leg by a pilot snake. Both the Water Moccasin and the Eastern Copperhead have been referred to as pilot snakes historically, making a proper attribution difficult with current records.[127]
South Carolina — Rhode was bitten by a rattlesnake while walking down the steps of her home in St. George. She reportedly did not feel the strike initially, but after a family member noticed blood on her ankle, the rattlesnake was found coiled near the steps. She was taken to a hospital in Summerville, but died approximately 15 hours after sustaining the bite.[128]
Florida — Weaver, a 35-year-old itinerant was bitten on the hand by a rattlesnake during a "faith" demonstration at a revival service in Bartow, on May 3, 1936. He died the next day after refusing medical treatment.[129]
Ohio — The bite occurred in Franklin Township at Snake Hollow, near the present-day Scioto Trails State Forest, southeast of Chillicothe, in Ross County. An article in the Chillicothe Gazette explained that it could not be confirmed whether the bite Lancaster suffered was from a copperhead or rattlesnake. Given the severity of her wounds, it was likely a timber rattlesnake.[132]
Pennsylvania — Link was showing his pet timber rattlesnake to a group of University of Pittsburgh students in the taxidermy lab of Carnegie Museum. While putting the snake back into its cage, Link was bitten on his right index finger. Link was admitted to Mercy Hospital and treated. Herpetologist Raymond Ditmars sent antivenom from New York by train in the custody of a Pullman porter. Antivenom was administered 12 hours after the bite, but Link died 15 hours after the bite.[133][134]
Pennsylvania — Stankiewicz, a Lithuanian immigrant, trapped a rattlesnake while fishing near Nanticoke. When he attempted to pull off the rattles, the snake escaped and bit him twice.[136]
Virginia — Bull died from a rattlesnake bite in Shenandoah County. The timber rattlesnake is the only species of rattlesnake in this region.
May 1906
Anonymous male
Unknown
Florida — A young man became seriously ill and died as a result of a snake bite while handling a snake during one of George Went Hensley's religious services in Bartow, Florida. Shortly after, the town of Bartow passed a law that banned snake handling.[118]
Ohio — Comstock died as result of a bite from a rattlesnake during a snake handling exhibition on Water Street in Chillicothe. A newspaper article read: "Edward Comstock, manager of a snake show, was bitten by a rattlesnake at Chillicothe, O., last week and died, in terrible agony. His hand and arm swelled to an enormous size. Every known antidote was tried without avail. He was changing the snakes and put his hand into a box, when the rattler bit him. He had handled snakes for years."[137]
Colorado — Rourke died from a bite while playing near a pile of rocks near the family's ranch in the Purgatory River Valley of southern Colorado. The child survived for a day after the bite.
^Barakat, Matthew (2022). "Respected snake researcher dies from rattlesnake bite". AP News, August 12, 2022.
^Oberholtz, Chris (2022). " 'The world lost a beautiful, faith-filled soul': Colorado boy remembered after deadly rattlesnake bite". Fox Weather, August 3, 2022.
^Pitofsky, Marina (2022). "Maryland man with 124 snakes in his home died of a snake bite, officials say". USA Today, April 14, 2022.
^Anita Miller (27 July 2005). "Wimberley Woman Missing". San Marcos Daily Record. Archived from the original on 26 September 2013. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
^ abMorrow, Jimmy (2005). Handling Serpents: Pastor Jimmy Morrow's Narrative History of His Appalachian Jesus' Name Tradition. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. p. 121. ISBN0-86554-848X.
^"Man dies after being bitten while handling snake during Bell County church service". Lexington Herald-Leader. July 28, 2015.
^Morrow, Jimmy (2005). Handling Serpents: Pastor Jimmy Morrow's Narrative History of His Appalachian Jesus' Name Tradition. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. p. 122. ISBN0-86554-848X.
^"Snakebite Fatal". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Cincinnati, Ohio. Associated Press. April 5, 1974. p. 14. Retrieved October 26, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Snakebite Fatal". Rushville Republican. Rushville, Indiana. Associated Press. September 25, 1972. p. 8. Retrieved October 26, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.