Junior Edwards, the Louisiana alligator hunter who helped launch Swamp People in 2010, has died, his grandson announced in a Facebook post on 26 July. The message, signed “Lil Willie,” told the reality‑TV patriarch to “rest easy” and thanked him for a lifetime of lessons on the water. Fellow cast member Ashley “Deadeye” Jones echoed the sentiment on Instagram, calling Edwards “one of the greatest alligator hunters there is” and asking fans to pray for the family.
No cause of death or precise age was disclosed, though relatives said earlier this month that the trapper had been in poor health and “needed a miracle” after a run of hospital visits. Edwards appeared in roughly 100 episodes before exiting as a full‑time cast member in 2015; he returned for the docuseries’ twelfth season in 2021, once again teaming with son Willie and grandson Willie Jr. to hunt the Atchafalaya Basin during Louisiana’s 30‑day gator season. The show remains a ratings staple for History, chronicling multigenerational families descended from French‑Canadian settlers who rely on the annual harvest to support their livelihoods.
Edwards’ death follows a series of hardships for the tight‑knit clan: his younger son Randy was killed in a 2018 car crash at age 35, an event that fans and producers say weighed heavily on the elder hunter in later seasons.
Tributes poured in across social platforms Saturday, with longtime teammate Ronnie Adams posting a group photo and writing that Edwards had “taught all of us how to respect the swamp”. Within hours, condolences from viewers stretched across Louisiana outdoor forums and national entertainment boards, underscoring the resonance of a television figure who rarely left the bayou in real life yet became a familiar presence in households worldwide.















































