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Nancy Ganer Singletary Felts

Birth
Death
1909 (aged 65–66)
Texas, USA
Burial
Overton, Rusk County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Nancy Ganor Singletary was the fifth of nine children born to the union of Henry Singletary and his second cousin twice removed, Hannah Amanda Singletary.

Nancy was reared in Florida and Georgia, and, after her father's early death at age 50, the family moved to Mississippi where she reached adulthood. Henry Singletary's place of burial is lost to history.

On November 26, 1868, Nancy became the bride of John Gladney Felts of Brandon, Rankin County, Mississippi. John was the son of a highly-respected educator and plantation owner, David William Felts and the former Mary Elizabeth "Polly" Griffin, natives of North and South Carolina, respectively.

Together, Nancy and John brought ten known children into the world, with the last three born in east Texas after the family's move from Mississippi.

Nancy died in 1909, some two years after the death of her beloved husband. Both were buried in Overton City Cemetery in Overton, Texas. Over the last century, their markers have been reclaimed by Mother Nature and the local mortuaries do not have burial records that date back to the first decade of the 20th century.
Nancy Ganor Singletary was the fifth of nine children born to the union of Henry Singletary and his second cousin twice removed, Hannah Amanda Singletary.

Nancy was reared in Florida and Georgia, and, after her father's early death at age 50, the family moved to Mississippi where she reached adulthood. Henry Singletary's place of burial is lost to history.

On November 26, 1868, Nancy became the bride of John Gladney Felts of Brandon, Rankin County, Mississippi. John was the son of a highly-respected educator and plantation owner, David William Felts and the former Mary Elizabeth "Polly" Griffin, natives of North and South Carolina, respectively.

Together, Nancy and John brought ten known children into the world, with the last three born in east Texas after the family's move from Mississippi.

Nancy died in 1909, some two years after the death of her beloved husband. Both were buried in Overton City Cemetery in Overton, Texas. Over the last century, their markers have been reclaimed by Mother Nature and the local mortuaries do not have burial records that date back to the first decade of the 20th century.


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