Manda F. Hale was born on 3 October 1910, in Missouri, United States. She married Buster Bynum on 1 October 1932, in Fairbanks, Graves, Kentucky, United States. They were the parents of at least 1 son. She lived in Magisterial District 2, Graves, Kentucky, United States in 1940 and Graves, Kentucky, United States in 1950. She died on 13 May 1983, at the age of 72, and was buried in Lynnville Baptist Church Cemetery, Lynnville, Graves, Kentucky, United States.
English: topographic name for someone who lived in a (usually remote) nook or corner of land, from Old English and Middle English hale, dative of h(e)alh ‘nook, hollow’, or a habitational name from a place so named such as Hale in Cheshire, Hampshire, Lancashire, Lincolnshire, Holme Hale (Norfolk), Hale Street (Kent), and Haile (Cumberland). In northern England the word often has a specialized meaning, denoting a piece of flat alluvial land by the side of a river, typically one deposited in a bend. See Haugh . In southeastern England it often referred to a patch of dry land in a fen. In some cases the surname may be a habitational name from any of several places in England named with this fossilized inflected form, which would originally have been preceded by a preposition, e.g. in the hale or at the hale. This surname is also established in south Wales.
Irish: shortened Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Céile (see McHale ).
Jewish (Ashkenazic): variant of Halle .
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