Advertisement

Nancy L. “Nannie” Taylor

Advertisement

Nancy L. “Nannie” Taylor

Birth
Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Death
23 Apr 1889 (aged 21)
Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Grandview, Jackson County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Nancy L. "Nannie" Taylor was the daughter of Lindsey Lee Taylor and Susanna Strode. She never married. She died at 21 years of age, cause unknown. She is buried at the Blue Ridge Cemetery. The picture of the foil pressing clearly shows her parents' initials. There are other extended family also buried at this cemetery.

I am the original descendant to research and upload the information for these Taylors onto the internet, and my research started with personal interviews with grandparents and great grandparents, and their many siblings who were fortunate to live long lives. Those individuals handed down many family history facts and recollections of their ancestors before them. I was blessed to grow up around them.

So you can imagine how disturbing it is to see multiple researchers hi-jacking family members and their headstones and inaccurately pairing them with different families, and then many more people copying their mistakes on their ancestry family files. Don't believe what you see in other peoples' ancestry files without doing your own research. I have always been open to answering questions and helping other researchers. Let's keep this site as accurate as possible for descendants to use long after we are gone.

by Lila Cole
Nancy L. "Nannie" Taylor was the daughter of Lindsey Lee Taylor and Susanna Strode. She never married. She died at 21 years of age, cause unknown. She is buried at the Blue Ridge Cemetery. The picture of the foil pressing clearly shows her parents' initials. There are other extended family also buried at this cemetery.

I am the original descendant to research and upload the information for these Taylors onto the internet, and my research started with personal interviews with grandparents and great grandparents, and their many siblings who were fortunate to live long lives. Those individuals handed down many family history facts and recollections of their ancestors before them. I was blessed to grow up around them.

So you can imagine how disturbing it is to see multiple researchers hi-jacking family members and their headstones and inaccurately pairing them with different families, and then many more people copying their mistakes on their ancestry family files. Don't believe what you see in other peoples' ancestry files without doing your own research. I have always been open to answering questions and helping other researchers. Let's keep this site as accurate as possible for descendants to use long after we are gone.

by Lila Cole


Advertisement

  • Created by: Lila Cole
  • Added: May 21, 2007
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/19470539/nancy_l-taylor: accessed ), memorial page for Nancy L. “Nannie” Taylor (10 Nov 1867–23 Apr 1889), Find a Grave Memorial ID 19470539, citing Blue Ridge Cemetery, Grandview, Jackson County, Missouri, USA; Maintained by Lila Cole (contributor 46507767).