Irving Taylor
Funeral services will be held Monday at 11 a. m. from the Worral Funeral Home, Kennett Square, for Irving Taylor, 64, of Toughkenamon, Pa.
Mr. Taylor died Thursday in Chester County Hospital, West Chester, Pa. Interment will be in Riverview Cemetery here and friends may call at the funeral home tomorrow night.
Mr. Taylor was born in Montchanin and was a former member of Christ Church, Greenville. He was in France during World War I and was a member of William Fahey American Legion Post in Kennett Square for 38 years.
He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mabel Pierson Taylor; three sons, Pierson and Francis, both of Kennett Square, and Lewis of Toughkenamon; two daughters, Mrs. Bertha James of Kennett Square, and Mrs. Helen somers of Ogden, Pa.; five brothers, John of Newark, Stewart of Henry Clay, Daniel of Lincoln, Henry of Newport, and Allen of Chatham; and a sister, Mrs. Irene McCann of Winterthur; and nine grandchildren. Another sister, Mrs. Bertha Lattomus, is deceased.
(Wilmington Morning News, 1 Jul 1961 (Saturday), Page 22)
Irving Taylor
Funeral services will be held Monday at 11 a. m. from the Worral Funeral Home, Kennett Square, for Irving Taylor, 64, of Toughkenamon, Pa.
Mr. Taylor died Thursday in Chester County Hospital, West Chester, Pa. Interment will be in Riverview Cemetery here and friends may call at the funeral home tomorrow night.
Mr. Taylor was born in Montchanin and was a former member of Christ Church, Greenville. He was in France during World War I and was a member of William Fahey American Legion Post in Kennett Square for 38 years.
He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mabel Pierson Taylor; three sons, Pierson and Francis, both of Kennett Square, and Lewis of Toughkenamon; two daughters, Mrs. Bertha James of Kennett Square, and Mrs. Helen somers of Ogden, Pa.; five brothers, John of Newark, Stewart of Henry Clay, Daniel of Lincoln, Henry of Newport, and Allen of Chatham; and a sister, Mrs. Irene McCann of Winterthur; and nine grandchildren. Another sister, Mrs. Bertha Lattomus, is deceased.
(Wilmington Morning News, 1 Jul 1961 (Saturday), Page 22)
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