John Taylor Narramore Sr.

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John Taylor Narramore Sr.

Birth
Bledsoe County, Tennessee, USA
Death
6 Mar 1894 (aged 55)
Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas, USA
Burial
Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Excerpts taken from:
http://www.genealogy.com/ftm/s/m/a/Sidney-A-Small/WEBSITE-000

JOHN TAYLOR NARRAMORE, son of Fielding Narramore, grandson of John Narramore and great-grandson of Edward Narramore. John died 1894, Cotton Plant Arkansas. The only son of ___ children, he was named for his maternal grandfather, John Taylor and paternal grandfather, John Narramore.

John Taylor married Jane Hannah Spencer on December 3, 1868, probably in Crossville, Cumberland, Tennessee. They spent most of their married life east of Crossville, near the old home place of his parents. He was the Circuit Court Clerk of Cumberland county, Tennessee for ten years following the Civil War, making a fine record as an efficient and popular official.

John served in both the Confederate and Union Armies.He served in the Confederate Army Company D, 16 battalion (Neal's) Tennessee Calvary as a private and then a 2nd Lieutenant. Records say he was "left ill at Holston, Tennessee on February 19th, 1863, and was listed as a deserter March 12, 1863.

Union Army records say he enlisted February
Excerpts taken from:
http://www.genealogy.com/ftm/s/m/a/Sidney-A-Small/WEBSITE-000

JOHN TAYLOR NARRAMORE, son of Fielding Narramore, grandson of John Narramore and great-grandson of Edward Narramore. John died 1894, Cotton Plant Arkansas. The only son of ___ children, he was named for his maternal grandfather, John Taylor and paternal grandfather, John Narramore.

John Taylor married Jane Hannah Spencer on December 3, 1868, probably in Crossville, Cumberland, Tennessee. They spent most of their married life east of Crossville, near the old home place of his parents. He was the Circuit Court Clerk of Cumberland county, Tennessee for ten years following the Civil War, making a fine record as an efficient and popular official.

John served in both the Confederate and Union Armies.He served in the Confederate Army Company D, 16 battalion (Neal's) Tennessee Calvary as a private and then a 2nd Lieutenant. Records say he was "left ill at Holston, Tennessee on February 19th, 1863, and was listed as a deserter March 12, 1863.

Union Army records say he enlisted February