Person:Bailey Maxey (1)

Watchers
Bailey Joseph Maxey
d.21 Feb 1998 Hale County?, Texas
m. Abt 1885
  1. Alfred Halsell Maxey1886 - 1981
  2. Fannie Ellen Maxey1888 - 1976
  3. Maggie Rice Maxey1890 - 1963
  4. Bailey Joseph Maxey1897 - 1998
  5. Isabella Maxey1898 - Bef 1910
  6. Lucy A. MaxeyAbt 1899 -
  7. Gladys MaxeyAbt 1903 -
  8. Radford Benton Maxey, Jr.1904 - 1972
m. Abt 1920
m. Abt 1942
Facts and Events
Name[1] Bailey Joseph Maxey
Gender Female
Birth[1][2] 2 Apr 1897 Pontotoc County, Indian Territory
Marriage Abt 1920 (her 1st husband; at least 2 children)
to James Roger Pinson
Marriage Abt 1942 (her 2nd husband)
to Dr. Ernest Nunnery
Death[2] 21 Feb 1998 Hale County?, Texas
Burial[2] Hale Center Cemetery, Hale Center, Hale County, Texas
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Pottawatomie, Oklahoma Territory, United States. 1900 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration Publication T623)
    ED 197, p. 14B.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Find A Grave.
  3.   Obituary, unknown newspaper.

    Services for Jo Pinson Nunnery of Lubbock will be at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in W.W. Rix Chapel with Betty Givens, a Christian Science Reader, officiating.

    Burial will follow in Hale Center Cemetery under direction of Rix Funeral Directors.

    She died Saturday, Feb. 21, 1998, in Methodist Hospital.

    She was born near Roff, Indian Territory, completed her education in Music at Kid-Key College (now Austin College) and attended North Texas State University. She taught school in Silverton and sang with the Liberty Quartet. She later taught school and piano in Hale Center and operated Pinson Drug in Lubbock with her husband, Roger Pinson.

    Following her husband's death, she was in business in Plainview. She married Dr. Ernest Nunnery. They made their home in Florida, where she was a life member of the Miami Music Club. Following Mr. Nunnery's death, she returned to Lubbock and was in the real estate business before retiring.

    She was a member of the Lubbock Music Club, the Lubbock Women's Club, PEO and the Order of the Eastern Star.

    Survivors include two sons, James Pinson of Lubbock and Maxey Pinson of Oklahoma City; a brother, Jack Maxey of Boyd; three grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.