Her father Robert, served as a color bearer with Company D, 45th Alabama Infantry. Thankfully he survived the war and returned home or she wouldn't have been born!
Lizzie married William Henry Kelley sometime in 1890 in Alabama. They had a family of eleven children and raised them in Geneva County, Alabama.
While Lizzie was a small woman, she was tough. She killed a rattlesnake when she was in her nineties. Lizzie liked to dance a jig and there is a picture of her dancing when she was quite old.
According to a newspaper article at the time of Lizzie's death, she left 220 direct descendants.
Her father Robert, served as a color bearer with Company D, 45th Alabama Infantry. Thankfully he survived the war and returned home or she wouldn't have been born!
Lizzie married William Henry Kelley sometime in 1890 in Alabama. They had a family of eleven children and raised them in Geneva County, Alabama.
While Lizzie was a small woman, she was tough. She killed a rattlesnake when she was in her nineties. Lizzie liked to dance a jig and there is a picture of her dancing when she was quite old.
According to a newspaper article at the time of Lizzie's death, she left 220 direct descendants.
Family Members
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Franklin E. Horn
1858–1932
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Michael Harrison C. "Dick" Horne
1860–1940
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James H. Horn
1862–1942
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Amanda Morgan "Mandy" Horn Jenkins
1863–1948
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Charlie Edward Horne
1865–1955
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Paulina Horne Fuller
1867–1938
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Myra Merian Horn Wynn
1869–1961
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Robert Marion Horn
1870–1952
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Sarah Horne
1872–1873
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Lilla Horn Shehee
1878–1959
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Minnie O Horn Haynes
1881–1958
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Ezell F. Horn
1884–1962
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Shepard King Horn
1886–1973
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Jesse Lenard Kelley Sr
1892–1985
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Leila Myrtle Kelley Greene
1894–1993
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Tinnie Estelle "Tiny" Kelley Palmer
1896–1997
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Dollie Dove Kelley Smith
1898–1992
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Charles Robert "Charlie" Kelley
1900–1928
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Roy Kelley
1901–1959
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Hunter K Kelley
1904–1964
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Henry Franklin Kelley
1907–1984
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Sumpter Kelley
1909–1928
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Thurston "Bill" Kelley
1912–2002
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Wilmer Kelley
1915–2001
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