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Aileen Pettit <I>Taylor</I> Black

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Aileen Pettit Taylor Black

Birth
Death
30 Nov 1990 (aged 86)
Burial
Norfolk, Norfolk City, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
5AE-L8
Memorial ID
View Source
Virginian-Pilot, The (Norfolk, VA) - Sunday, December 2, 1990

Aileen Taylor Black , 86, active in efforts to improve the community for more than 60 years, died Nov. 30, 1990, in a hospital.

She was the widow of Barron Foster Black, a civic leader who died in 1974. In addition to her own work in civic affairs, she supported his endeavors, such as the expansion of Norfolk's libraries, which earned him the accolade of First Citizen in 1959. A branch library bears his name. Until his marriage, Barron Black was a shy, hard-working young lawyer, a daughter said. ''Mother brought him out so much, it was unbelievable,'' she said.

Mrs. Black was known for energy and charm in her recruiting for causes.

''It was natural with her,'' a friend said, ''to enter a room full of people and, out of genuine warmth and interest, talk with all who were there, young and old, newcomers and longtime friends. She made people feel special.''

Constance Darden, a friend of Mrs. Black's, recalled, ''To the end she was pretty, and she was determined, despite illnesses, to enjoy her family to the utmost. Nobody doted on grandchildren more than she did, and she had a lot of them.''

Mrs. Darden noted that Aileen Black's main interests lay in three fields - church work, music and gardening - with excursions into other areas. In Norfolk's Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, she was a former president of the Women of the Church, served on the altar guild, sang in the choir and was a choir mother. She also had sung in the choir of Christ and St. Luke's Church and in choruses with the Norfolk Symphony, now the Virginia Symphony. For years she was a member of the Symphony's nominating committee and was on the board of directors. She was an honorary director at her death.

A member of the Norfolk Garden Club since 1930, she won its Horticultural Award in 1974. She raised funds for the Day Nursery. A sustaining member of the Junior League, she had been its first corresponding secretary. At the Workshop for the Blind, she helped, among other things, with transportation.

Survivors include three daughters, Anna B. Hudgins, Aileen B. Gustin and Jane B. Clark, all of Norfolk; nine grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren.

The funeral will be conducted at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Church of the Good Shepherd by the Rev. Ross Wright. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apartments, Norfolk, is handling arrangements. The family will be at 7634 North Shore Road, Norfolk, from 4 to 8 p.m. today. Memorial donations may be made to the Aileen Black Memorial Fund, care of the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, 1520 North Shore Road, Norfolk, 23505.
Virginian-Pilot, The (Norfolk, VA) - Sunday, December 2, 1990

Aileen Taylor Black , 86, active in efforts to improve the community for more than 60 years, died Nov. 30, 1990, in a hospital.

She was the widow of Barron Foster Black, a civic leader who died in 1974. In addition to her own work in civic affairs, she supported his endeavors, such as the expansion of Norfolk's libraries, which earned him the accolade of First Citizen in 1959. A branch library bears his name. Until his marriage, Barron Black was a shy, hard-working young lawyer, a daughter said. ''Mother brought him out so much, it was unbelievable,'' she said.

Mrs. Black was known for energy and charm in her recruiting for causes.

''It was natural with her,'' a friend said, ''to enter a room full of people and, out of genuine warmth and interest, talk with all who were there, young and old, newcomers and longtime friends. She made people feel special.''

Constance Darden, a friend of Mrs. Black's, recalled, ''To the end she was pretty, and she was determined, despite illnesses, to enjoy her family to the utmost. Nobody doted on grandchildren more than she did, and she had a lot of them.''

Mrs. Darden noted that Aileen Black's main interests lay in three fields - church work, music and gardening - with excursions into other areas. In Norfolk's Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, she was a former president of the Women of the Church, served on the altar guild, sang in the choir and was a choir mother. She also had sung in the choir of Christ and St. Luke's Church and in choruses with the Norfolk Symphony, now the Virginia Symphony. For years she was a member of the Symphony's nominating committee and was on the board of directors. She was an honorary director at her death.

A member of the Norfolk Garden Club since 1930, she won its Horticultural Award in 1974. She raised funds for the Day Nursery. A sustaining member of the Junior League, she had been its first corresponding secretary. At the Workshop for the Blind, she helped, among other things, with transportation.

Survivors include three daughters, Anna B. Hudgins, Aileen B. Gustin and Jane B. Clark, all of Norfolk; nine grandchildren; and 15 great-grandchildren.

The funeral will be conducted at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Church of the Good Shepherd by the Rev. Ross Wright. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apartments, Norfolk, is handling arrangements. The family will be at 7634 North Shore Road, Norfolk, from 4 to 8 p.m. today. Memorial donations may be made to the Aileen Black Memorial Fund, care of the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, 1520 North Shore Road, Norfolk, 23505.


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