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Mary Elizabeth “Lizzie” <I>Parker</I> Tabor

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Mary Elizabeth “Lizzie” Parker Tabor

Birth
Franklin County, Georgia, USA
Death
10 Sep 1945 (aged 75)
Dunwoody, DeKalb County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Ila, Madison County, Georgia, USA GPS-Latitude: 34.2459736, Longitude: -83.2727778
Memorial ID
View Source
The Carnesville Herald
Thursday, September 13, 1945

MRS. MARY E. TABOR, widow of J.C. Tabor and sister of Mrs. E. L. Cochran died, Monday afternoon, September 10th. at Dunwoody, Ga. near Athens.

Funeral services were conducted at Liberty Church near Danielsville by Rev. T.H. Wheelis, and Rev. W. G. O'Bryant, at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Interment was in the church cemetery.

Mrs. Tabor is survived by 1 daughter, Mrs. Richard D. Fox, Jr. of Dunwoody, 2 sons, Paul Tabor of Spartanburg, SC and C. D. Tabor of Americus; 1 sister, Mrs. E. L. Cochran of Lavonia and 2 brothers, V.L. Parker and Frank Parker, both of Royston.

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A Brief Family History:

The Tabors are buried at Liberty Church near the Hudson River in Madison County. The Parkers are buried at Providence United Methodist Church near Parkertown in Hart County, Georgia. The Haleys are buried in the Haley Family Cemetery on Neal Little Road in Franklin County, Georgia. The Arrendalls and Fannins are buried on Bald Eagle Road Road near Nathan's log house homesite.** Nathan Arendall was born in 1756 and died on 13 April 1823. His wife, Susannah Fannin Arendall was born 30 March 1774 and died 13 July 1845. The "letter to the editor" writer to the "Commerce News" was written by Mary Elizabeth Parker Tabor, wife of James Capel Tabor while they lived at Fort Lamar near the Hudson River. Nathan Arendall was Mrs. J.C. Tabor's great-great-grandfather.

**Nathan Arrendall's land grant reference is in the "Commerce News" letter to the editor. He (Nathan) was granted 304 acres of land by Georgia Governor, John Clark in 1819. (The grant is in good condition and very legible - this land is where he settled, raised his family, lived and died. For many years this has been known as the Dave Hall place in a few miles of Bold Spring Church. It is now owned by Mr. Larkin Franks. (Later to be owned by Benton Hall, Sr. and his heirs.) This "Brief Family History" interpreted by historian, William Carson.
The Carnesville Herald
Thursday, September 13, 1945

MRS. MARY E. TABOR, widow of J.C. Tabor and sister of Mrs. E. L. Cochran died, Monday afternoon, September 10th. at Dunwoody, Ga. near Athens.

Funeral services were conducted at Liberty Church near Danielsville by Rev. T.H. Wheelis, and Rev. W. G. O'Bryant, at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Interment was in the church cemetery.

Mrs. Tabor is survived by 1 daughter, Mrs. Richard D. Fox, Jr. of Dunwoody, 2 sons, Paul Tabor of Spartanburg, SC and C. D. Tabor of Americus; 1 sister, Mrs. E. L. Cochran of Lavonia and 2 brothers, V.L. Parker and Frank Parker, both of Royston.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A Brief Family History:

The Tabors are buried at Liberty Church near the Hudson River in Madison County. The Parkers are buried at Providence United Methodist Church near Parkertown in Hart County, Georgia. The Haleys are buried in the Haley Family Cemetery on Neal Little Road in Franklin County, Georgia. The Arrendalls and Fannins are buried on Bald Eagle Road Road near Nathan's log house homesite.** Nathan Arendall was born in 1756 and died on 13 April 1823. His wife, Susannah Fannin Arendall was born 30 March 1774 and died 13 July 1845. The "letter to the editor" writer to the "Commerce News" was written by Mary Elizabeth Parker Tabor, wife of James Capel Tabor while they lived at Fort Lamar near the Hudson River. Nathan Arendall was Mrs. J.C. Tabor's great-great-grandfather.

**Nathan Arrendall's land grant reference is in the "Commerce News" letter to the editor. He (Nathan) was granted 304 acres of land by Georgia Governor, John Clark in 1819. (The grant is in good condition and very legible - this land is where he settled, raised his family, lived and died. For many years this has been known as the Dave Hall place in a few miles of Bold Spring Church. It is now owned by Mr. Larkin Franks. (Later to be owned by Benton Hall, Sr. and his heirs.) This "Brief Family History" interpreted by historian, William Carson.


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