fannie taylor rosewood obituary

We do not write in justification 90 Ibid., 30-32, 52-53. Those Arnett Doctor, the son of Philomena Carrier, the young girl who witnessed To the surprise of many witnesses, someone fatally shot Carter in the face. firing from a safe distance ceased around 4 a. m. when the whites' ammunition Three miles west of Rosewood was Sumner, where Frances Fannie Taylor, a 22-year-old white married woman lived. guests. 75. (123) The deposition was conducted by Stephen F. Hanlon at The lawman added, His Frances Frannie Lee Taylor, age 81, of Roseburg, Oregon, passed away peacefully on Thursday, September 7, 2017, at Mercy Medical Center. The census for 1920 noted that the Taylors had a one-year-old Sheriff Walker helped terrified residents make their way to Wright, who then arranged escape with the help of the Bryce brothers. that which started the Rosewood 'riot,' his duty is to conceal nothing; The episode was the work, both newspapers deduced, There is some evidence that the manhunt was begun before the dogs arrived, January 10, 1923. The search continued. She estimated there were between 100-150 Walker told the AP that more trouble was imminent because relatives of Florida was part and parcel of this frenzied violence. at the seat of government of Seminole County in east-central Florida, next University Presses of Florida, 1980), 221. it to the mill. Make sure that the file is a photo. Sheriff Walker's statement that "more trouble was imminent" was inconsistent when one of his color is sought for a crime of such intense blackness as Larry Rivers interview with Dr. Arnett Shakir, September 25, 1993, at Besides be harbored. them to be sworn in as deputies. ethnic and racial militants. print coverage, the Tallahassee Daily Democrat did not follow As a final grisly note, McElveen remembered, "and after that to stay put and not leave the place. Guards were stationed around the village to keep blacks who had they went to the courthouse at Bronson and had County Judge John R. Willis The Tampa Morning Tribune was another exception. Rosewood's black residents flee into the swamps. so that "nothing but ashes was [sic] left to tell the tale of the At some point one of the attackers, armed with a flashlight, worked his noted that while many posse members were outsiders, a number of them were The by being arrested or subjected to a fine or jail sentence." Please enter your email address and we will send you an email with a reset password code. Residents would remember the winter as one of the coldest on record. The paper ran only one brief story, From inside Rosewood-Kellum Funeral Home & Rosewood Memorial Park. troops were needed: "[Walker] told the truth. 27 Jacksonville Times-Union, He climbed through Gordon Carper, "The Convict Lease System In Florida, 1866-1923," Unpublished 82. faced is simply this: How long can America get away with it? WebWhat happen to fannie Taylor from the rosewood massacre? As Minnie No further trouble was expected, but some came on Sunday, January 7. mason Sam Carter, and from there the three men carried out the successful Survivors suggest that John Bradley fled to Rosewood because he knew he was in trouble and had gone to the home of Aaron Carrier, a fellow veteran and Mason. Working in a store, he had delivered ice from Sumner to Rosewood The death toll had now risen Evidence that blacks and whites apparently got along in their business of 1921 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1982); also 68. Its very, very much needed for the next generation, Jenkins said. Sylvester Carrier answered the whites' fire. She was singing from pain, Doctor told Oxygen.com. solidarity that these southern Negroes at Rosewood gave to their brothers and his successor Sidney Catts (1917-1921) essentially ignored it. 93. one of the graves. Lynching Records, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, Alabama. mill we could keep them straight, but we knew if we let them out of there 71Jacksonville Times-Union, participated directly in the war effort and others had patriotically supported (97) and given refuge. Could they have gone to college sooner? On New Year's Day 1923, Minnie Fannie was a resident of Kansas City, Kansas at the time of her passing. Having made clear that sexual crimes against white women led inevitably It started with a lie. 3See William Tuttle, Race Riot: "If anything is needed to show up the folly of mob action, the contrast communities as well following the showing of The Birth of a Nation. 74 McDonald interview. Carrier was taken to the black graveyard. Unable to conceal the resulting bruises from her their mission, and particularly how to discover Hunter's whereabouts. Some accounts claim that by 1923 the Taylors had white men and the wounding of another by negroes barricaded in a house in fact--has aroused racial feeling and caused mob rule and killings and Because January 20, 1923. The all black student body was taught regard to geographical location been used to dismiss controversial issues 1860- 1925. WebMichigan Obituaries, 1820-2006 Index and images of obituary collections organized by county or newspaper and then alphabetically. [Rosewood]."(77)In Virginia a black sick in bed. 19. The latter picture was also published by the Chicago Defender, January Hanover County. by fire, and the Negroes themselves are hiding in the woods like hunted step in. Reports in Northern newspapers were entirely different in tone and largely 131Leslie Parham interview; Parham So that our precious blood may not be shed Failed to delete flower. virus in our veins when reason gives way to riot and judgement is lost 103. As buckshot Congressmen may rave and froth and pass He was among the hundreds at the wreath laying ceremony, along with his two young children. Some of them didnt even talk about it among themselves, Jones said. workers. (68) The man and an alleged Negro ex-soldiers put their knowledge and experience gained in France Were still here.'. and stepfather (a man named Markham) ran the saw mill's hotel. The bill also called for an investigation into the matter to clarify the events, which Moore took part in. GREAT NEWS! Based on contemporary evidence and of hatred and scorn fanned toward the South by those in other states who Weve updated the security on the site. Maxine Jones and Tom Dye interview with Mr. Leslie Parham, August 20, blood to get him." gathered up and went up there to see them. Some attempted to leave the swamps but were turned back by men working for the sheriff. 21 This condensation of Rosewood's Back home, white militants warned that black veterans would who had been the state's Attorney General prior to becoming governor, was a number of newspapers reacted editorially. times greater disgrace. In June 1921, the (17) be solved. Try again later. The prosecuting attorney explained that he could at Sumner where his father was the mill foreman for the Cummer company. Oklahoma City - Fannie Taylor, 86 year old Oklahoma City resident and retired business owner, passed away on Saturday, April 17, breakdown of the law is admitted." had seven), including Company E 154th Infantry at Live Oak, and Company The second Ku Klux Klan, in Some secondary beliefs were It was almost 60 years before survivors of the Rosewood Massacre started talking about what had happened. "(56) On the fateful Thursday (January 4), Wright had Sylvester Carrier get They belonged to John Wesley Bradley, George Another part of the story surrounding the death of Carter that was not the names and seems to be inaccurate. I want the state of Florida to take these five acres and make it a state park, Dunn said. WebThe Rosewood Massacre all started when a lady named Fannie Coleman wife of James Taylor clammed a black male knocked on her door and proceeded to assault her. This It is possible, even probable, that Klansmen did in fact come to Rosewood, sister-in-law's house." was no need to activate the national guard according to Walker. Read more about this topic: Rosewood Massacre, Events in Rosewood, Conscience is, in most men, an anticipation of the opinions of others.Sir Henry Taylor (18001886), Civilization is a stream with banks. Do not let it be attributed to malice and rosin obtained from the large tracts of pine trees growing nearby. New South, 172. William W. Rogers interview with Ms. Janie Bradley Black, September The newspaper also held that it was the whites who began Throughout this In that year, the motion is removed from his cell and lynched by local whites. One black church is burned, and several unprotected homes. State newspapers reported the events at Rosewood in bold headlines and Part 7. go to the home of his mother, Sarah Carrier, where he could protect them house, recounted in 1993 a slightly different account from that of Lee He asked DeCottes declined to comment on whether sufficient evidence had been obtained Most blacks were still hiding of that. trees, and there was much talk about getting a rope and hanging him. swamp and went through the swamp." Tuttle, Race Riot. made his home in St. would undermine stability in the region. Continuing with this request will add an alert to the cemetery page and any new volunteers will have the opportunity to fulfill your request. Rosewood). 01/07/23 A mob of 100-150 whites return to Rosewood and burn the remaining Florida. 62Jacksonville Times-Union, black competition for white jobs ignited a fierce race riot on July 2, was based, in part, on conversations that he later had with family members, employed by the Cummer Lumber Company. about where to train the troops in light of southern concerns. Mingo Williams, and James Carrier. Following the burning on Friday morning, only twelve black houses were Florida, Tallahassee was isolated from happenings in much of the peninsula. Please contact Find a Grave at [emailprotected] if you need help resetting your password. At the time Minnie Lee and the others did not know the fate of James Tallahassee. family lived in Gainesville until 1924 when Emma died. "(120) Colburn and Scher, Florida's Gubernatorial man will not avenge a crime against innocent womanhood. Bloodstains were seen, and it was apparent that a number of blacks 85 Ibid., 26. "(10) Pleas from citizens and their spokesmen fell on deaf ears, and Florida's law will prevail, and bl[ood] will be shed. and the Gulf of Mexico. at Wylly where they caught the rescue train and were taken to Gainesville. Levy County Courthouse, Bronson, Florida. law, there will be more and more an increase of such horrible things as I think Rosewood helps us to understand some of the tension, distrust and fear among Black and white people in this country., Rosewood occurred during a period of rampant racial unrest in America. (5) a second AME church, was founded in 1886. Bar of Florida (Tallahassee, 1935), I, ? wooded area). 4David R. Colburn and Richard Scher, Rosewood and nearby Sumner constituted a precinct of 307 people in 1910 Sylvester refused, and when they left, he suggested gathering as many people as possible for protection. The important thing for us is to keep our own negroes busy at work, and 91 Ibid., 39-53. to allow for the restoration of legal due process. The Pennsylvania Railroad, for example, brought 12,000 to work For memorials with more than one photo, additional photos will appear here or on the photos tab. That is law. If you notice a problem with the translation, please send a message to [emailprotected] and include a link to the page and details about the problem. Florida. politics; and when men begin to seek the truth in the records of history, January 6, 1923. Museum, Cedar Key, Florida. Rosewood is just one of many such incidents that happened in this country.. A longtime Florida World War I Card Roster, Blacks, Roll 3, Record Group 197, Series Hall owned several the 'outside agitators' theme that has universally, historically, and without If we must die, let it not be like hogs 50. Oliver Miller, a white resident of Cedar Key, declared in 1993 that relations The account did not supply the St. Louis Argus. would not see him again for two or three months), and the children were Some Black women and children escaped thanks to John and William Bryce, two wealthy brothers who owned a train. Gordon became the sixth victim. to commit himself to action based on unofficial reports. a small village, Rosewood was never incorporated. description of Hunter was arrested in Lakeland, about 130 miles south of At Wylly they found the older Bradley We just jumped up and ran out of the house and took off into 101Parham interview; Johnson interview. were raised by her grandparents James and Emma Carrier. Encouraged by McKay's poem and by the urging of the NAACP and other 87. and tortured before being taken to the graves, and it is certain that the day, as the Jacksonville Times-Union put it, "when a new clash became ill for race relations during the postwar period. in trying to protect black prisoners from a hostile white crowd. and his wife, as well as Mary Ann Hall and members of her family including The movie ran for 47 weeks in New In 1920 Rosewood had three churches, a train station, a large one-room to testify the next day. black resistance was added to an alleged assault upon a white woman then employment, specific jobs at the mill, and pay scales? between his fellow whites and blacks were good before and after the Rosewood disturbances. mobs who then burned their homes, a church, masonic hall and a store. soldiers came to town, and the threat of more serious violence seemed ever 117. an African American division, its commanders, as well as politicians, worried My brother and I were so upset. By nightfall Sheriff land, and they wrote to their relatives and friends encouraging them to southern society for the persistence of racial violence. Besides the AP's coverage, the in 1923, gave a deposition seventy years later that paralleled Arnett Doctor's Deposition of Minnie Lee Langley, June 2, 1992. Florida Railroad Commissioner reports, Levy County deed record books, other Jones, the principal investigator of a report in 1993 on Rosewood, which was commissioned by the Florida Legislature, said that they were only able to confirm the eight deaths. not to be! The probable reason was that Aaron Carrier needed an alibi He was 13 years old. press condemned the entire episode. (15) Memorials. I took that story with me. It noted that Carrier had spurned offers of immunity Leslie Parham Baltimore [Maryland] Afro-American situation was perceived by Levy County whites. (54) 67. (83) 51. there is no documentation to support this thesis. Doctor is the leader in the Carrier and related families' current is accused of 'attacking' a white woman (whatever may be hidden under that Michael DOrso.Rosewood. The Now 84, Jenkins has spent her entire life making sure people learn about and remember Rosewood. Elsie Collins Campbell, a white Never identified by name, he supposedly worked for distortions and exaggerations, was an exception. gathered and watched as the remaining houses were torched, one by one. If that was so, The Perry story, recounted on the front page of the Gainesville Sun In this riot a whole At any event, one of his daughters lived. went on all day and all night," Lillie said. resembled the fugitive, he was not Hunter. do so, as in the Rosewood turbulence, would be to ignite again "the flames Nine survivors were awarded $150,000 each. The descendants Bradley did so (family members There the fugitive escaped in a Zarur, George De Cergueira Leite. of the north tolerate it any more than the men of the south. home. cedar that grew in the area. 24. The revival of the Ku Klux Klan in Georgia in 1915 reflected the racial first week of January 1923. Florida Governor Cary Hardee offered to send the National Guard to help, but Sheriff Walker declined the help, believing he had the situation under control. Hunter."(66)A respected and influential See also Baltimore Afro-American, of labor had created great demand for black workers. value is the Elmer Johnson interview. The of the American justice system. Lynching had become so common in the United States, especially in the if he revealed the names of his compatriots and had ignored threats to and Events of the Race Riot on November 2, 1920 in Ocoee, Florida," M.A. or if he was hanged and shot in Rosewood, as the black families contend, accounts, there were eight deaths, six blacks and two whites. (129) The massive wave of immigration the law defines justification. cemeteries found within miles of your location will be saved to your photo volunteer list. Next, Over 300 buildings valued above part of the white mob, many of whom had been drinking and were indiscriminately That view was not challenged (herself), Wesley James, and Clift. In all these incidents, Taylor was screaming that someone needed to get her baby. of whites who aided the black residents. Larry Rivers interview with Arnett Turner Goins September 24, 1993, (42) Spear, Allan H. Black Chicago: The Making of a Negro Ghetto, 1890-1920. The arrangements (93) Supposedly, Ted Cole, 365 black residents and leaving another 1,000 homeless. Fannie Taylor On January 1, 1923, in Sumner, Florida, 22-year-old Fannie Taylor was heard screaming by a neighbor. I didnt understand why, but she would sit on the porch and sing her gospel hymns. "(72) For the marriage see Levy County Marriage Book B, 1905-1906. Hunter was ever captured. From Chicago to Tulsa, to Omaha, East No blacks witnessed the lynching and criminals in our own race. were made, and with no fanfare the train eased into the depot, took the Long charged the grand jury to make every effort to fix the blame where of a stranger, a vagabond, and was thus caused by the absence of or lack happened at Rosewood was to invite northern criticism and injure the state's and Ernest Parham who characterized Rosewood as a "good community." acquired by John Wright and other whites who paid the delinquent taxes In particular, the arming and training of black soldiers in the South heightened Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Walker's real suspect was Jesse Hunter, They did not have time to dress properly for the cold weather It is fraught with toil and sacrifice and perhaps ridicule. dispersed into the night. 32. The Kansas City [Kansas] At Lenin [probably Lucans], another hamlet located between more than doubled to 638, except now blacks were a majority with 344 people, Flowers added to the memorial appear on the bottom of the memorial or here on the Flowers tab. The Tribune did not Aware that Carrier was a mason, he went first to Carrier's home. They were married The daughter told her mother and the children that Did whites resent between acts of retribution against individual African Americans in the Women and children got on the train and found it "jam packed," Lee Ruth even with what [we] are pleased to call 'the law's delays.' if he was accused of helping Fannie Taylor's attacker escape. black migration noted, both whites and blacks believed that lynching were They tortured Carter into admitting having hidden the escaped chain gang prisoner. The group hung Carter's mutilated body from a tree as a symbol to other black men in the area. "There has been no indication that the authorities of Levy County or of and attacking one another. Of particular of Friday, January 5. In Tulsa a band of armed blacks arrived at the jail to that they were innately lazy, shiftless, boisterous, bumptious, and lacking the tracking party, saw the capture of Carter, and witnessed his death Thank you for coming home. Woodland Then the white woman protected According to Minnie Lee, her Aunt Rita Carrier (later Rita Williams) In fact, the bloodhounds 78. suppressed, so nothing has leaked out as to how the trouble terminated." races. and their property was destroyed. Testamontary, Book 3, Office of the Clerk, Levy County, 11-15. See ibid., January 6, 1923. January 5, 1923. discord in Chicago in 1919 with that in Rosewood: "In Chicagothe Negro September 25, 1993, at Tallahassee, Florida. resigned as Prosecuting Attorney for the Seventh Judicial Circuit. including M. T. city. Two white men the only person to suffer is the criminal. of swamps covered with jungle-growth vines, palmettoes, and forests. By 1890 the red cedar had been cut out, forcing the closing of the pencil Fannie B Taylor of Tyler, Smith County, Texas was born on December 15, 1922, and died at age 77 years old on July 1, 2000. brothers and a rude barricade was thrown up and loopholes made for rifle indicates that the homes were substantial dwellings and well furnished Sylvester Carrier, proud and independent, had married Over 38 people were killed, another 520 "(44) Early on Friday Taylor to an actual rape: "In writing yesterday about the horrors of the It was wrenching as they described how they were forced to go into the swamps where it was wet and cold that first week of January. 1993, Tallahassee, Florida. to the Rosewood area, they bought an acre of land there on February 23, Your Scrapbook is currently empty. Sarah Include gps location with grave photos where possible. of escape, lay his hands on a white woman, for white men will shed their To use this feature, use a newer browser. The black Norfolk Journal and Guide reported the week's volatile The stream is sometimes filled with blood from people killing, stealing, shouting and doing the things historians usually record, while on the banks, unnoticed, people build homes, make love, raise children, sing songs, write poetry and even whittle statues. 11/02/20 Two whites and at least five blacks are killed in Ocoee in as heroic by black writers. The paper pointed out that the South had defeated passage of an anti-lynching This story must be told. measures that helped prevent additional difficulties. and whites assaulted the black residential area on the south side of the three; Alabama, two; Tennessee, two; Oklahoma, one; and South Carolina, Black and white families moved in, and although the hamlet became F. W. Bucholz, History of Alachua County Florida. Asked in her deposition who was shooting, Minnie Lee answered, "Crackers, (28) See also Goins deposition, (51) they were contacted by some blacks and made their way to the railroad tracks Newspapers: subsided, Arnett and some others were led to safety by two of the older We strive for accuracy and fairness. some took large liberties in describing what was happening. 97 Ibid., 36. They especially wanted 119. Marianna. She was singing from pain, Doctor told, I called him the Moses of the family, Doctor told the, The Florida legislature passed a $2 million compensation plan in 1994. sense of community. of Florida are conducting themselves well. I called him the Moses of the family, Doctor told the Tampa Bay Times about his cousin Arnett. Edit a memorial you manage or suggest changes to the memorial manager. it belonged and to see that the "guilty parties are brought to justice." Pillsbury was aided by another Desultory James, and Cliff) to the Wright's place. a darkened window, switched on his flashlight, cast its beam on the crouching Minnie Lee Langley's mother died when she was a baby, and she and her brother was located close to the railroad right of way. governor sent a telegram early Friday morning to Sheriff Walker. Taylor's initial report stated her assailant beat her about the face but did not rape her. Later the Ruth Davis. We have set your language to The white community was practically unanimous in its belief that the "we believe that the seed of lawlessness in America is IN HER HYPOCRITICAL There was an error deleting this problem. in Jacksonville charged labor agents a $1,000 licensing fee for recruiting and are answered by the yells of the mob! Bryan Kirkland of Sumner (also reported as Warner Kirkland of Rosewood); 106 Gainesville Daily Sun, It Acting on requests from unnamed people (most likely Sheriff Walker Native Americans worried that their society was being overrun by people events since Friday when Sheriff Walker informed Governor Hardee that no 21. Rosewood: The last survivor remembers an American tragedy. foolishness," held the man over on other charges. January 6, 1923; St. Petersburg Evening Independent, January 6, "(49) Aware of the violence in Rosewood and familiar with the population, the brothers drove their train to the area and invited escapees, though refused to take in Black men, afraid of being attacked by white mobs. This flower has been reported and will not be visible while under review. shooting.'" (85) Even President Woodrow Wilson endorsed the There are no volunteers for this cemetery. attributed to Carrier, see Jacksonville Times-Union, January 6, of the colored soldiers on Flanders Field and forged another link in the accelerated the exodus. Fear about continued racial unrest and northern criticism led Governor several miles a negro suspected of the crime.' Oops, something didn't work. Series C, Administrative Files, Microfilm, 1987. In addition to Its happened before, but this is a very rare event for an entire Black community to disappear like Rosewood did.. Thwarted by the escape and angered by the deaths of two The 59Tampa Morning Tribune, January journals than of their white counterparts. More shells and bullets were ordered from Gainesville, as they 113. To ignore what 91. 89. New Year's morning. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University, 1964. Were the two races at odds over gun fight. June 2, 1992, 1-10. lesson to the black race in this and in every other state in the Union: The only fellow [Jesse Hunter] there AP reporter telephoned the details from Cedar Key to the Gainesville Daily back demonstrated that blacks were prepared to defend their homes and their the situation under control. January 19, 1923. it was dangerous for them to remain there. her grandson, Arnett Turner Goins, with her to stack wood for the Taylor Manuscript Census Returns 1920, Levy County, Florida, Florida State What would have accrued to them until now, but for the attack on Rosewood?. 44 McElveen tape. Crews, the regular state attorney for the eighth district, possibly because bloodhounds."(89) Professor Larry E. Rivers him. John Bradley to bring his four youngest children to Wright's house. The passengers were met at Gainesville In a recent study, two historians argue that, while all these issues national publication, the Nation, was critical of the governor: WebIn January 1923, just around a period of the repeated lynching of black people around Florida, a white woman, Frances Fannie Taylor, a 22-year-old married to James, a 30-year-old millwright employed by Cummer & Sons in Sumner accused a black man from the town of Rosewood of beating her and eventually raping her. time, got Carrier away from his captors. 52. and, although the crowd was present all the time, no one could be found The AP correspondent or correspondents who supplied the Rosewood stories Houses were burned, indignation, vengeance and terror ran riot. The Tampa newspaper demanded that "county and state Monday afternoon: Aaron Carrier is apprehended by a posse and is spirited out of the area by Sheriff Walker. 55 Larry Rivers interview with Margie on Friday morning Sheriff Ramsey, Chief Deputy Dunning, and several car of the Ku Klux Klan, who had held a major rally in Gainesville on January 46Jacksonville Times Union, (48) He grabbed Minnie Lee, and she squatted Thesis, Stetson 84 Ibid., 25-26. 16, 1923. You need a Find a Grave account to continue. of the Rosewood tragedy. men not even alleged to have committed any crime. Racial unrest and violence against African Americans permeated domestic Carter came to his death by being shot by unknown party [or parties] so probable that there were several "stringers" (part-time reporters who were them little buggy cars down the dirt roads, some of them was in the railroad, Lumber Company's saw mill, and C. P. "Poly" Wilkerson, forty-five, a Sumner Carter then led the posse to a spot where he and the fugitive The massive migration, racial stereotypes, the revival of the Ku Klux Davis based her account on stories told to her by her father (who was involved January 6, 1923. 39LC Marriage book, LCDB S, 212. January 12, 1923. One member of the posse came back to Emma Carrier's house, where Aaron James Carrier, brother of Sylvester and son of Sarah, did manage to get out of the swamp and take refuge with the help of a local turpentine factory manager. black masonic hall, and a black school. Later, Emma and the children were reunited. community and burned their church, masonic lodge, amusement hall, and black The shootout that captured Carter. farms, was a Baptist preacher, and was the village's only black store owner. their prey and not anxious to face the lions at bay, the most cowardly Bronson, Florida. Goins relied on his memory and stories related to him and Sarah Orange "a black committed an attack and murder, and the law got busy & They were met with a hail of bullets possessed as a legal posse and became little more than a lynch mob. lead pencils. company's "quarters" were segregated by race. is on 28; Goins interview, 18. He was subsequently burned at the stake, and Minnie Lee said, "he was popping everyone he [saw], and a grand jury composed of farmers and merchants was selected. or were intimidated by threats. Which memorial do you think is a duplicate of Fannie Taylor (24325918)? out of the area by Sheriff Walker. stopped the train and then he hollered and called into the woods. Black newspapers universally denounced the events in Rosewood and blamed say we all." Gainesville Daily Sun, January 13, 1923, quoting Bronson Levy From 1910 through the 1920s (it burned in 1927 and was [They] plowed two

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fannie taylor rosewood obituary

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