76.3 F
The Villages
Sunday, May 19, 2024

Nancy L. Hayden

Nancy L. Hayden
Nancy L. Hayden

Nancy L. Hayden, 77, Leesburg, Florida, passed away on February 22, 2017 at Leesburg Regional Medical Center, Leesburg, Florida. Ms. Hayden was born on September 3, 1939 in Chicago, Illinois to her parents David McCooe and Louise (Davis) McCooe. Ms. Hayden had been employed with Bealls in Eustis, Florida for several years and had also worked as a Secretary for the Charles Tax Agency in Merrillville, IN. She moved to Leesburg 12 years ago from Terre Haute, Indiana and was of the Christian faith. She loved her grandchildren, great grandchildren and also an avid cat lover. She is survived by her loving children: Deborah (Craig) Johnson of Merrillville, IN and Jeffry Farmer of Leesburg, Florida; five grandchildren: Randy, Pamela, Courtney, Jeffry and Jenna; four great-grandchildren: Skyler, Beau, Melody and Colin and several loving nieces and nephews. In lieu of flowers the family has requested donations be made to The American Cancer Society in Nancy’s loving memory.

Must elderly return to work to afford to stay in The Villages?

A Village of Rio Grande resident asks if residents are supposed to go back to work at age 80 to afford to live in The Villages.

Cap the amenity rate and make the golfers pay more

A Village of DeSoto resident, in a Letter to the Editor, says it’s time to cap the amenity rate and make the golfers pay more for upkeep of the courses.

Delivery of The Villages Daily Sun newspaper

A Village of Summerhill resident went out on a rainy morning to get his copy of The Villages Daily Sun and found a “single-bagged sponge.”

Growth is out of control thanks to The Villages

A woman who bought property in Oxford in 1997 believes growth is out of control thanks to the The Villages. Read her Letter to the Editor.

VIP club in The Villages provides link for audio books

A leader in the Visually Impaired Persons Club of The Villages responds to a previous Letter to the Editor from a Middleton reader concerned about a perceived lack of E-Books.