Frances McCrackan Bliley


    Birth Date: 06/06/1944
    Deceased Date: 02/01/2022

    Smithfield, NC – Frances McCrackan Bliley, age 77, died Monday, February 1, 2022 at Rex Hospital in Raleigh. Born June 6, 1944 in Norfolk, VA to the late David Harris and Marjorie Barnes McCrackan, she was preceded in death by a brother, Robert Eugene McCrackan and a sister, Marsha McCrackan Whitt.

    The family will receive friends from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. Friday, February 4, 2022 at the Parrish Funeral Home in Selma. A graveside service will be conducted Saturday at 11:00 a.m. in the Union Chapel United Methodist Church, 6535 Raleigh Road, Kittrell, NC. The Rev. Cecilia B. Duke will officiate.

    Surviving are her husband, Daniel J. Bliley; son, Daniel P. Bliley of Raleigh; daughters, Caroline Bliley McGee and her husband, Christopher Shane McGee of Cary. NC; Frances Kathleen Bliley Hernandez and her husband, Frank Joseph Hernandez of Mobile, AL; brother, David Harris McCrackan, Jr. of Richmond, VA; and three granddaughters: Molly Hight McGee, Hollis Catherine McGee, and Beatrice Pilar Hernandez.

    In lieu of flowers the family asks that memorial contributions be made to the Ruf Creek Ranch Animal Rescue, 5201 Brogden Road, Smithfield, NC 27577.

    Condolences may be sent to the family at parrishfh.com.

    Frances Bliley’s happiest moments were spent designing beautiful clothing. “She loved dressing the ladies of Smithfield, North Carolina,” said her husband, Dan Bliley. “She sewed her own clothes and often made clothes for our girls.”

    “She taught us beauty,” said Kathleen Bliley Hernandez, “and not just on the surface. Everything she did went to a deeper level. Through her art, she helped us find ourselves.”

    “For her family, she had an endless supply of love,” said Caroline Bliley McGee. “She gave us the gift of encouragement. When I was a child I showed an interest in cooking, and she incorporated me right into her kitchen. We butted heads sometimes – and that galvanized my own thoughts.”

    “Mom taught us the need for balance, that we can’t indulge ourselves all the time,” said Daniel Patrick Bliley, Frances’ son. “We did savor a ‘little something for now,’ as she would call a treat. I think she was one of the rare people who could find balance in parenthood.

    “Ma was my closest confidant, my best friend, at times my co-conspirator. But first and foremost she was Mom: the most important role of all, and one not to be confused with the others. In high school, there was a constant stream of kids through our house for whom she was a second mother.”

    “Mom told us, ‘if you have a chance to have a good time, take it – within bounds, of course,’” said Kathleen Bliley. ‘Reach out and grab a good thing. Don’t sit at home if you have an opportunity to make a memory. These moments will be there to help you during the rough times of your life.’ She didn’t hold us back.”

    “Mom was very Southern, but progressive,” said Caroline Bliley. “She was pragmatic, but compassionate. In her gentleness, she was a wonderful ambassador. But she taught us how to advocate for ourselves, how to negotiate, how to read people.”

    “We will miss her very much,” said her husband Dan.

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