| Birth* | 6 Mar 1895 | Elizabeth was born at Inman, Fayette Co., Georgia, on 6 Mar 1895. |
| | She was the daughter of James Wesley Culpepper and Sarah Pickens Taylor. |
| Employment* | | Elizabeth's occupation: teacher. |
| 1900 Census | 1 Jun 1900 | Louise, Elizabeth and Sarah was listed as a daughter in James Wesley Culpepper's household on the 1900 Census at Fayette Co., Georgia.1 |
| 1910 Census | 15 Apr 1910 | Louise, Elizabeth, Sarah and Julia was listed as a daughter in James Wesley Culpepper's household on the 1910 Census at Fayetteville, Fayette Co., Georgia.2 |
| 1920 Census | 1 Jan 1920 | Elizabeth, Sarah and Julia was listed as a daughter in James Wesley Culpepper's household on the 1920 Census at Fayetteville, Fayette Co., Georgia.3 |
| Census | 1920 | She was listed as a resident in the census report at Fayetteville, Fayette Co., Georgia, in 1920. |
| 1930 Census | 1 Apr 1930 | Elizabeth and Sarah was listed as a daughter in James Wesley Culpepper's household on the 1930 Census at Fayetteville, Fayette Co., Georgia.4 |
| Death* | 15 Oct 1964 | She died at Fayetteville, Fayette Co., Georgia, on 15 Oct 1964.5 |
| Burial* | 17 Oct 1964 | Her body was interred on 17 Oct 1964 at Fayetteville City Cemetery, Fayetteville, Fayette Co., Georgia. |
| Biography* | | It is not known whether Elizabeth Mae was born in Pike County or Fayette County. Her younger sister was born in Pike County, and by the 1900 census, the family was in Fayette County. The obituary of her father, James Wesley Culpepper, indicates that over a fifteen year period he taught in three different towns, Concord, in Pike County, and Inman and Woolsey in Fayette County. Since he was admitted to the Bar in 1905, if he is estimated to have taught five years in each town, he would still have been in Pike County in 1895. LDS IGI Batch 7100004 Sheet 2 gives "Inman, Fayette, Georgia" as her place of birth. Mae died of brain cancer. The following funeral notice is from The Atlanta Times of 16 Oct 1964: Miss Culpepper rites Saturday FAYETTEVILLE--Services for Miss Mae Culpepper, a teacher at Fayetteville Elementary School will be at 4 p. m. Saturday at the Fayetteville Methodist Church. Dr. Robert E. Lee, pastor of Lutheran Church of Redeemer in Atlanta, and the Rev. J. Ray Donahoo, pastor of the Fayetteville Methodist Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the city cemetery here. Miss Culpepper, who taught for more than 45 years, died Thursday in an Atlanta hospital. She had taught at Ashley Hall, Charleston, S. C., in the public schools of Clinton, Winston-Salem and Chapel Hill N. C., and Henry Grady High School in Atlanta. She also had served in an administrative capacity in the Georgia Department of Education and in the curriculum division of the Atlanta School System. Miss Culpepper also had taught night classes at Georgia State College. After her retirement from the Atlanta system, she joined the faculty of the Fayetteville Elementary School in September 1963 and taught there until a few weeks before her death. Miss Culpepper was a member of the Lutheran Church of Redeemer. Surviving are three sisters, Mrs. B. D. Murphy and Mrs. W. E. Greer, both of Fayetteville, and Mrs. A. M. Bowen, Newnan. |