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{{Infobox officeholder
{{in use}}
| name =
[[File:May Mourning Faris McKinney (Biographies of representative women of the South, v1, 1920).png|thumb|McKinney in ca. 1920]]
| image = May Mourning Faris McKinney (Biographies of representative women of the South, v1, 1920).png
'''May Mourning Farris McKinney''' (1874-1959) was an American clubwoman and non-profit executive who served as President General of the [[United Daughters of the Confederacy]] (UDC).<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912">{{cite book |last1=Connelley |first1=William Elsey |last2=Coulter |first2=Ellis Merton |title=History of Kentucky |date=1912 |publisher=American Historical Society |isbn=978-0-598-57298-1 |page=398 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gK_Ubz-glJsC&pg=PA398 |access-date=18 November 2024 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>
| office = President General of the [[United Daughters of the Confederacy]]
| caption = McKinney circa 1920
| term_start =
| term_end =
| successor =
| predecessor =
| birth_name = May Mourning Faris
| birth_date = June 23, 1874
| birth_place = [[Hickman, Kentucky]], U.S.
| death_date = December 22, 1959 (aged 85)
| death_place = [[Paducah, Kentucky]], U.S.
| resting_place = [[Mount Kenton Cemetery]]
| education =
| occupation = Non-profit executive
| years_active =
| works =
| spouse = Roy Weaks McKinney
| children = 2
| relatives =
| father = Dr. [[Alexander Allen Faris]]
| awards =
}}
'''May Faris McKinney''' ({{nee}} '''Faris'''; after marriage, '''Mrs. Roy Weaks McKinney'''; [[nickname]], '''"May-Roy"''';<ref name="History1989" /> 1874-1959) was an American clubwoman and non-profit executive. She was the first [[Kentucky]] woman to serve as President General of the [[United Daughters of the Confederacy]] (UDC), an honor conferred upon her November 13, 1919, at the national convention at [[Tampa, Florida]]. Previously, McKinney was elected Recording Secretary-General at [[Little Rock, Arkansas]] in 1910, serving three terms. From October 1905 to October 1907, McKinney was President of the Kentucky Division of the UDC. She was at one time Regent of the Fort Jefferson Chapter of the [[Daughters of the American Revolution]] (DAR), and also served the Paducah Woman's Club as president for two terms. During [[World War I]], McKinney was prominently identified with [[Liberty bond|Liberty loan]] sales and other war activities.<ref name="Neuman1920">{{cite book |last1=Neuman |first1=Fred Gus |title=The Story of Paducah |date=1920 |publisher=Young printing Company |page=103 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QcEaAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA103 |access-date=20 November 2024 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>


==Early life and education==
==Early life and education==
May Mourning Faris was born at the home of her parents, Maple Hall, in [[Hickman, Kentucky]]. May's father, Dr. [[Alexander Allen Faris]], lost an arm in the [[American Civil War|civil war]], but nevertheless developed a very high degree of skill as a surgeon, and was one of the few men thus handicapped who achieved distinction in that branch of the profession in his era.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" /> May's mother was Florence (Goalder) Faris.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
May Mourning Faris was born at the home of her parents, Maple Hall, in [[Hickman, Kentucky]], on June 23, 1874.<ref name="Womans1914" /> May's father, Dr. [[Alexander Allen Faris]], lost an arm in the [[American Civil War|civil war]], but nevertheless developed a very high degree of skill as a surgeon, and was one of the few men thus handicapped who achieved distinction in that branch of the profession in his era. May's mother was Florence (Goalder) Faris.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912">{{cite book |last1=Connelley |first1=William Elsey |last2=Coulter |first2=Ellis Merton |title=History of Kentucky |date=1912 |publisher=American Historical Society |isbn=978-0-598-57298-1 |page=398 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gK_Ubz-glJsC&pg=PA398 |access-date=18 November 2024 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> A member of the UDC, she was a charter member and officer of the chapter at Hickman.<ref name="Collier1920" /> May had four siblings: four siblings, Light, Irene, Evan, and Allen.<ref name="History1989">{{cite book|first=Lady Sarah Moss |last=McKinney-Smith |title=History and Families, McCracken County, Kentucky, 1824-1989 |date=1989 |publisher=Turner Publishing Company |isbn=978-0-938021-36-0 |pages=181–82 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cpMzZe1INPMC&pg=PA181 |access-date=19 November 2024 |language=en}}</ref>


May's grandfather, Richard Alexander Faris, was a native of North Carolina and spent his active life as a planter in [[Mississippi County, Missouri]]. His wife was Ethelinda Harris. Ethelinda's father, Samuel Harris, was a member of the Rowan County, North Carolina Committee of Safety during the Revolutionary war.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
McKinney's grandfather, Richard Alexander Faris, was a native of [[North Carolina]] and spent his active life as a planter in [[Mississippi County, Missouri]]. His wife was Ethelinda Harris. Ethelinda's father, Samuel Harris, was a member of the [[Rowan County, North Carolina]] Committee of Safety during the [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary war]].<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />


She was educated by private tutors to the age of twelve, after which she attended Mrs. M. E. Clark's Select School for Young Ladies at [[Nashville, Tennessee]], graduating in 1892, and later taking two years of college work. She then entered society and church and other activities, and was prominent in Hickman social circles for several years.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
McKinney was educated by private tutors to the age of twelve, after which she attended Mrs. M. E. Clark's Select School for Young Ladies at [[Nashville, Tennessee]],<ref name="History1989" /><ref name="Womans1914" /> graduating in 1892, and later taking two years of college work.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" /> An unusual side to her training was that obtained from close association with her father in the practice of his profession, when very frequently, in time of emergency, she assisted him with surgical operations.<ref name="Collier1920" />

She afterwards "entered into society", and church and other activities, and was prominent in Hickman [[Social group|social circles]] for several years.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />


==Career==
==Career==
[[File:Mrs. Roy W. McKinney (Confederate Veteran, 1910, p. 205).png|thumb|McKinney circa 1910]]
She was a member and for two years was president of the Paducah Woman's Club. During [[World War I]], she was chair of sales of the Woman's Division in McCracken County for all the loan campaigns, was chair of War Savings Stamp sales for the county districts of McCracken County, was recording secretary of the Woman's Division of McCracken County's Council of National Defense, a member of the Speaker's Bureau, of the Home Service Department of the McCracken County Red Cross, and chair of the UDC Red Cross Unit. Mrs. McKinney is a member of the River Raisin Chapter at Lexington of the [[National Society of United States Daughters of 1812]]. For two years, she served as regent of the Fort Jefferson Chapter of the [[Daughters of the American Revolution]].<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
[[File:Mrs. Roy W. M'Kinney (Confederate Veteran, 1911).png|thumb|McKinney circa 1911]]
In the UDC, McKinney's efforts over time brought her increasing prominence. In 1909, she joined Paducah Chapter,<ref name="United1999">{{cite book |last1=Pinnegar |first1=Edith |editor1-last=United Daughters of the Confederacy |title=United Daughters of the Confederacy Patriot Ancestor Album |date=1999 |publisher=Turner Publishing Company |isbn=978-1-56311-530-1 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MWbH92ZVysQC&pg=PA29 |access-date=20 November 2024 |language=en |chapter=Paducah Chapter #341. Paducah, Kentucky.}}</ref> and for two years, she served as its president. For two years, she was president of the Kentucky chapter; two years, chair of the General History Committee; two years, chair of the General Finance Committee; ten years, treasurer of the [[Shiloh National Military Park|Shiloh Monument]] Committee; and three years, chair of the committee to provide a monument to [[Jefferson Davis]] at his Kentucky birthplace.For three years, she served as Recording Secretary-General.<ref name="Womans1914">{{cite book |title=Woman's Who's who of America: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporary Women of the United States and Canada, 1914-l9l5 |date=1914 |publisher=American Commonwealth Company |page=525 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZGRIMtCVztEC&pg=PA525 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> An interesting incident in her career as Recording Secretary-General happened at [[Washington, D.C.]] when McKinney locked up in a room some newspaper reporters until they agreed to omit from their stories of the convention certain remarks made on the floor by members, but that were not typical of the best in the UDC.<ref name="Collier1920">{{cite book |last1=Collier |first1=Margaret W |title=Biographies of representative women of the South |date=1920 |via=Internet Archive |pages=22–25 |url=https://archive.org/details/biographiesofrep01coll/page/22 |access-date=19 November 2024 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> On the score of her work in these various offices, McKinney was placed in nomination and elected President General of the UDC at [[Tampa, Florida]], on November 19, 1919.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" /><ref name="ThePaducahSun1959" /> By 1946, she was serving as Executive Editor of the ''United Daughters of the Confederacy Magazine'', published monthly by the UDC from Paducah, Kentucky.<ref name="TheBulletin1946">{{cite journal |title=The Bulletin |journal=The Bulletin of the United Daughters of the Confederacy |date=1946 |page=39 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=myZXAAAAYAAJ |access-date=20 November 2024 |publisher=United Daughters of the Confederacy |language=en}}</ref><ref name="The Paducah Sun1946">{{cite news |title=Five magazines are published here |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-paducah-sun-five-magazines-are-publi/159425416/ |access-date=20 November 2024 |work=The Paducah Sun |via=[[Newspapers.com]] |date=27 October 1946 |location=Paducah, Kentucky |page=12}}</ref>


She was a member and president for two years of the Paducah Woman's Club; member of the River Raisin Chapter at Lexington of the [[National Society of United States Daughters of 1812]]; and Chaperon of [[Forrest's Cavalry Corps]].<ref name="ConfederateVeteran1910">{{cite journal |title=Drinking Fountain at Eldorado, Ark. |journal=Confederate Veteran |date=May 1910 |volume=XVIII |issue=5 |page=205 |url=https://archive.org/details/confederateveter18conf/page/205 |access-date=20 November 2024 |publisher=S.A. Cunningham |location=Nashville, Tenn. |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> McKinney was a member of the DAR;<ref name="DAR1921">{{cite book |author1=Daughters of the American Revolution |title=Index of the Rolls of Honor (ancestor's Index) in the Lineage Books of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Volumes 1 to 160 |date=1921 |publisher=Press of Pierpont, Siviter & Company |page=26 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oVVXAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA26 |access-date=20 November 2024 |language=en |chapter=Mrs. May Mourning Faris McKinney. 57080.}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> for two years, she served as Regent<ref name="ThePaducahSun1959" /> of the Fort Jefferson Chapter of the DAR.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
In the UDC, her untiring efforts brought her increasing prominence for many years. For two years, she was president of Paducah Chapter; three years, recording secretary general; two years, chair of the General History Committee; two years, chair of the General Finance Committee; ten years, treasurer of the Shiloh Monument Committee; and three years, chair of the committee to provide a monument to [[Jefferson Davis]] at his Kentucky birthplace. On the score of her work in these various offices, McKinney was placed in nomination and elected at [[Tampa, Florida]], on November 19, 1919, president general of the UDC.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />

During World War I, McKinney was chair of sales of the Woman's Division in McCracken County for all the loan campaigns; chair of War Savings Stamp sales for the county districts of McCracken County; recording secretary of the Woman's Division of McCracken County's Council of National Defense; member of the Speaker's Bureau, of the Home Service Department of the McCracken County Red Cross; and chair of the UDC Red Cross Unit.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
On November 26, 1901, in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Hickman, she married Roy Weaks McKinney. They had two children, Elizabeth and Roy, both of whom died in infancy.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
On November 26, 1901, in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Hickman, she married Roy Weaks McKinney. They had two children, Elizabeth and Roy,<ref name="Womans1914" /> who died in infancy.<ref name="Collier1920" />


Roy Weaks McKinney was born in Caldwell County, Kentucky, May 3, 1875, a son of James W. McKinney, who was president of the Cadiz Bank in [[Trigg County, Kentucky]], where for many years he was a prominent democrat and at one time, represented the county in the [[Kentucky General Assembly]]. James W. McKinney married Elizabeth Weaks, who was born at Tobaccoport, [[Stewart County, Tennessee]], in 1855, and died in Trigg County in 1877. The McKinneys came from Scotland to [[North Carolina]] in [[Thirteen Colonies|Colonial]] times, the first of the family in the U.S. being Barnabas McKinney. His branch of the McKinneys were descended from [[Clan Macdonald of Sleat]], and through them from the MacDonalds of the Isles and also the Sumerleds, a clan with high connections with the reigning house of Scotland in the year 900. Roy McKinney's maternal grandfather, E. P. Weaks, was a prominent business man in [[Paducah, Kentucky]] where he died when about eighty years of age. He was president of the firm Weaks Bros. & Company, wholesale grocers. E. P. Weaks married Mary Jane Acree, a descendant of James Brigham, a [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary]] soldier from [[Sullivan County, Tennessee]]. James Brigham gave some of his property for the court house and other buildings in Sullivan County. Roy McKinney was a prominent Paducah businessman, being president of the McKinney-Guedry Company, and a vestry man of Grace Episcopal Church.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
Roy Weaks McKinney was born in Caldwell County, Kentucky, May 3, 1875, a son of James W. McKinney, who was president of the Cadiz Bank in [[Trigg County, Kentucky]], where for many years he was a prominent democrat and at one time, represented the county in the [[Kentucky General Assembly]]. James W. McKinney married Elizabeth Weaks, who was born at Tobaccoport, [[Stewart County, Tennessee]], in 1855, and died in Trigg County in 1877. The McKinneys came from Scotland to [[North Carolina]] in [[Thirteen Colonies|Colonial]] times, the first of the family in the U.S. being Barnabas McKinney. His branch of the McKinneys were descended from [[Clan Macdonald of Sleat]], and through them from the MacDonalds of the Isles and also the Sumerleds, a clan with high connections with the reigning house of Scotland in the year 900. Roy McKinney's maternal grandfather, E. P. Weaks, was a prominent business man in [[Paducah, Kentucky]] where he died when about eighty years of age. He was president of the firm Weaks Bros. & Company, wholesale grocers. E. P. Weaks married Mary Jane Acree, a descendant of James Brigham, a [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary]] soldier from [[Sullivan County, Tennessee]]. James Brigham gave some of his property for the court house and other buildings in Sullivan County. Roy McKinney was a prominent Paducah businessman, being president of the McKinney-Guedry Company, and a vestry man of Grace Episcopal Church.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />


McKinney was confirmed by Bishop [[Thomas Underwood Dudley]] in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Hickman, and for many years was identified with church activities. She became a member of [[Grace Episcopal Church (Paducah, Kentucky)|Grace Episcopal Church]] at Paducah.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" />
McKinney was confirmed by Bishop [[Thomas Underwood Dudley]] in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Hickman, and for many years was identified with church activities. She became a member of [[Grace Episcopal Church (Paducah, Kentucky)|Grace Episcopal Church]] at Paducah.<ref name="ConnelleyCoulter1912" /><ref name="ThePaducahSun1959" /> For recreation, she enjoyed motoring.<ref name="Womans1914" />


May Faris McKinney died at Paducah, Kentucky, on December 22, 1959.<ref name="ThePaducahSun1959">{{cite news |title=Former DAR, UDC Leader Dies Here |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-paducah-sun-former-dar-udc-leader-d/159315683/ |access-date=19 November 2024 |work=The Paducah Sun |via=Newspapers.com |date=23 December 1959 |location=Paducah, Kentucky |page=1}}</ref>
May Faris McKinney moved to Paducah, Kentucky, after her marriage. She died at her home in this city on December 22, 1959. Interment was at [[Mount Kenton Cemetery]].<ref name="ThePaducahSun1959">{{cite news |title=Former DAR, UDC Leader Dies Here |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-paducah-sun-former-dar-udc-leader-d/159315683/ |access-date=19 November 2024 |work=The Paducah Sun |via=Newspapers.com |date=23 December 1959 |location=Paducah, Kentucky |page=1}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|30em}}

==External links==
* [https://digitalcollections.mclib.net/luna/servlet/detail/McCracken~1~1~269~967:Mrs--Roy-W--McKinney,-Recording-Sec?sort=title%2Csubject%2Ccontributor%2Ccoverage Postcard of Mrs. Roy W. McKinney, Recording Secretary General U. D C., Drawer 490, Paducah, Kentucky] via McCracken County Public Library Digital Collections


{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:McKinney, May Mourning Farris}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:McKinney, May Farris}}
[[Category:1874 births]]
[[Category:1874 births]]
[[Category:1959 deaths]]
[[Category:1959 deaths]]
[[Category:American women civilians in World War I]]
[[Category:Clubwomen]]
[[Category:Clubwomen]]
[[Category:People from Fulton County, Kentucky]]
[[Category:Presidents General of the United Daughters of the Confederacy]]
[[Category:Daughters of the American Revolution people]]
[[Category:Women presidents of organizations]]
[[Category:American women nonprofit executives]]
[[Category:Episcopalians from Kentucky]]
[[Category:19th-century American Episcopalians]]
[[Category:20th-century American Episcopalians]]

Latest revision as of 16:39, 21 November 2024

May Faris McKinney
McKinney circa 1920
President General of the United Daughters of the Confederacy
Personal details
Born
May Mourning Faris

June 23, 1874
Hickman, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedDecember 22, 1959 (aged 85)
Paducah, Kentucky, U.S.
Resting placeMount Kenton Cemetery
SpouseRoy Weaks McKinney
Children2
Parent
OccupationNon-profit executive

May Faris McKinney (née Faris; after marriage, Mrs. Roy Weaks McKinney; nickname, "May-Roy";[1] 1874-1959) was an American clubwoman and non-profit executive. She was the first Kentucky woman to serve as President General of the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC), an honor conferred upon her November 13, 1919, at the national convention at Tampa, Florida. Previously, McKinney was elected Recording Secretary-General at Little Rock, Arkansas in 1910, serving three terms. From October 1905 to October 1907, McKinney was President of the Kentucky Division of the UDC. She was at one time Regent of the Fort Jefferson Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), and also served the Paducah Woman's Club as president for two terms. During World War I, McKinney was prominently identified with Liberty loan sales and other war activities.[2]

Early life and education

[edit]

May Mourning Faris was born at the home of her parents, Maple Hall, in Hickman, Kentucky, on June 23, 1874.[3] May's father, Dr. Alexander Allen Faris, lost an arm in the civil war, but nevertheless developed a very high degree of skill as a surgeon, and was one of the few men thus handicapped who achieved distinction in that branch of the profession in his era. May's mother was Florence (Goalder) Faris.[4] A member of the UDC, she was a charter member and officer of the chapter at Hickman.[5] May had four siblings: four siblings, Light, Irene, Evan, and Allen.[1]

McKinney's grandfather, Richard Alexander Faris, was a native of North Carolina and spent his active life as a planter in Mississippi County, Missouri. His wife was Ethelinda Harris. Ethelinda's father, Samuel Harris, was a member of the Rowan County, North Carolina Committee of Safety during the Revolutionary war.[4]

McKinney was educated by private tutors to the age of twelve, after which she attended Mrs. M. E. Clark's Select School for Young Ladies at Nashville, Tennessee,[1][3] graduating in 1892, and later taking two years of college work.[4] An unusual side to her training was that obtained from close association with her father in the practice of his profession, when very frequently, in time of emergency, she assisted him with surgical operations.[5]

She afterwards "entered into society", and church and other activities, and was prominent in Hickman social circles for several years.[4]

Career

[edit]
McKinney circa 1910
McKinney circa 1911

In the UDC, McKinney's efforts over time brought her increasing prominence. In 1909, she joined Paducah Chapter,[6] and for two years, she served as its president. For two years, she was president of the Kentucky chapter; two years, chair of the General History Committee; two years, chair of the General Finance Committee; ten years, treasurer of the Shiloh Monument Committee; and three years, chair of the committee to provide a monument to Jefferson Davis at his Kentucky birthplace.For three years, she served as Recording Secretary-General.[3] An interesting incident in her career as Recording Secretary-General happened at Washington, D.C. when McKinney locked up in a room some newspaper reporters until they agreed to omit from their stories of the convention certain remarks made on the floor by members, but that were not typical of the best in the UDC.[5] On the score of her work in these various offices, McKinney was placed in nomination and elected President General of the UDC at Tampa, Florida, on November 19, 1919.[4][7] By 1946, she was serving as Executive Editor of the United Daughters of the Confederacy Magazine, published monthly by the UDC from Paducah, Kentucky.[8][9]

She was a member and president for two years of the Paducah Woman's Club; member of the River Raisin Chapter at Lexington of the National Society of United States Daughters of 1812; and Chaperon of Forrest's Cavalry Corps.[10] McKinney was a member of the DAR;[11] for two years, she served as Regent[7] of the Fort Jefferson Chapter of the DAR.[4]

During World War I, McKinney was chair of sales of the Woman's Division in McCracken County for all the loan campaigns; chair of War Savings Stamp sales for the county districts of McCracken County; recording secretary of the Woman's Division of McCracken County's Council of National Defense; member of the Speaker's Bureau, of the Home Service Department of the McCracken County Red Cross; and chair of the UDC Red Cross Unit.[4]

Personal life

[edit]

On November 26, 1901, in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Hickman, she married Roy Weaks McKinney. They had two children, Elizabeth and Roy,[3] who died in infancy.[5]

Roy Weaks McKinney was born in Caldwell County, Kentucky, May 3, 1875, a son of James W. McKinney, who was president of the Cadiz Bank in Trigg County, Kentucky, where for many years he was a prominent democrat and at one time, represented the county in the Kentucky General Assembly. James W. McKinney married Elizabeth Weaks, who was born at Tobaccoport, Stewart County, Tennessee, in 1855, and died in Trigg County in 1877. The McKinneys came from Scotland to North Carolina in Colonial times, the first of the family in the U.S. being Barnabas McKinney. His branch of the McKinneys were descended from Clan Macdonald of Sleat, and through them from the MacDonalds of the Isles and also the Sumerleds, a clan with high connections with the reigning house of Scotland in the year 900. Roy McKinney's maternal grandfather, E. P. Weaks, was a prominent business man in Paducah, Kentucky where he died when about eighty years of age. He was president of the firm Weaks Bros. & Company, wholesale grocers. E. P. Weaks married Mary Jane Acree, a descendant of James Brigham, a Revolutionary soldier from Sullivan County, Tennessee. James Brigham gave some of his property for the court house and other buildings in Sullivan County. Roy McKinney was a prominent Paducah businessman, being president of the McKinney-Guedry Company, and a vestry man of Grace Episcopal Church.[4]

McKinney was confirmed by Bishop Thomas Underwood Dudley in St. Paul's Episcopal Church at Hickman, and for many years was identified with church activities. She became a member of Grace Episcopal Church at Paducah.[4][7] For recreation, she enjoyed motoring.[3]

May Faris McKinney moved to Paducah, Kentucky, after her marriage. She died at her home in this city on December 22, 1959. Interment was at Mount Kenton Cemetery.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c McKinney-Smith, Lady Sarah Moss (1989). History and Families, McCracken County, Kentucky, 1824-1989. Turner Publishing Company. pp. 181–82. ISBN 978-0-938021-36-0. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  2. ^ Neuman, Fred Gus (1920). The Story of Paducah. Young printing Company. p. 103. Retrieved 20 November 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ a b c d e Woman's Who's who of America: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporary Women of the United States and Canada, 1914-l9l5. American Commonwealth Company. 1914. p. 525. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Connelley, William Elsey; Coulter, Ellis Merton (1912). History of Kentucky. American Historical Society. p. 398. ISBN 978-0-598-57298-1. Retrieved 18 November 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ a b c d Collier, Margaret W (1920). Biographies of representative women of the South. pp. 22–25. Retrieved 19 November 2024 – via Internet Archive. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  6. ^ Pinnegar, Edith (1999). "Paducah Chapter #341. Paducah, Kentucky.". In United Daughters of the Confederacy (ed.). United Daughters of the Confederacy Patriot Ancestor Album. Turner Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-56311-530-1. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d "Former DAR, UDC Leader Dies Here". The Paducah Sun. Paducah, Kentucky. 23 December 1959. p. 1. Retrieved 19 November 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ "The Bulletin". The Bulletin of the United Daughters of the Confederacy. United Daughters of the Confederacy: 39. 1946. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  9. ^ "Five magazines are published here". The Paducah Sun. Paducah, Kentucky. 27 October 1946. p. 12. Retrieved 20 November 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ "Drinking Fountain at Eldorado, Ark". Confederate Veteran. XVIII (5). Nashville, Tenn.: S.A. Cunningham: 205. May 1910. Retrieved 20 November 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  11. ^ Daughters of the American Revolution (1921). "Mrs. May Mourning Faris McKinney. 57080.". Index of the Rolls of Honor (ancestor's Index) in the Lineage Books of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Volumes 1 to 160. Press of Pierpont, Siviter & Company. p. 26. Retrieved 20 November 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
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