Sign up to explore more
Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.
Sign up to explore more
Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.
Fannie Mae Manning 1891–1963 – Genealogical Records
Birth Date: 29 April 1891
Birth Location: DeKalb County, Tennessee, United States of America
Death Date: 30 November 1963
Death Location: White County, Tennessee, United States of America
Father: William Billings
Mother: Ada Redmon
Spouse(s):
Children(s):
Fannie Mae Manning was born in 1891 in DeKalb County, Tennessee, United States of America, the child of William Franklin Billings And Ada Ader Redmon. Fannie Mae Manning passed away in 1963 in White County, Tennessee, United States of America.
Find more search results for Fannie ManningReliability Score
This score reflects the reliability of the source family tree. A high rating indicates a trustworthy source with strong data consistency.
- A 3 criteria (Strong)
- B 2 criteria (Medium)
- C 1 criteria (Basic)
- N/A 0 criteria (Insufficient)
This tree's reliability score:
- Record available
- Descendant's record available
- Star tree owner
Biography
- Fannie Mae Manning was born in 1891 in DeKalb County, Tennessee, United States of America, the child of William Franklin Billings And Ada Ader Redmon.
- Fannie Mae Manning passed away in 1963 in White County, Tennessee, United States of America.
Immediate Family
Parents
Spouses(s)
Children(s)
Fannie Manning's Ancestors
Fannie Manning's Timeline
2 Records
Sources
Event Type: Birth
Event Date: 29 April 1891
Event Place: DeKalb County, Tennessee, United States of America
Record Source: U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current
Genealogy Event 2
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 30 November 1963
Event Place: DeKalb County, Tennessee, United States of America
Record Source: U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current
Genealogy Event 3
Event Type: Burial
Event Place: White County, Tennessee, United States of America
Record Source: U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current