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Jackson Taylor
Neely
April 5, 1993 – July 24, 2024
Jackson Taylor Neely, 31, of Huntsville, AL, passed away on Wednesday, July 24, 2024.
Jackson was known to world as Jack, but he was Taylor to his family.
Taylor was born on April 5, 1993, in Huntsville, AL, to Tracy and Wendy Neely as the middle of three children. He was preceded in death by his grandfather, Gary Lynn Neely: a larger-than-life man whose memory and legacy Taylor cherished and carried with him. He is survived by the love of his life, April; father, Tracy, and mother, Wendy; older brother, Nathan, and his wife, Whitney; younger sister, Bailey; grandmother, Wanda Neely; aunt, Monnie Neely; grandfather, James Taylor Hutchinson, and his wife, Wanda; uncle, Chris Hutchinson; two beloved dogs, Izzy and Lula, and cat, Charlie—as well as countless other family and friends whose lives he touched.
Despite its brevity, Jack's life overflowed with accomplishments creative, professional, and personal. He was a community leader dedicated to building others up using his own experiences in overcoming seemingly insurmountable challenges. He was gifted with great natural talent, though it was his tenacity, dedication, and determination which truly defined him. Committed to self-improvement, he embodied the spirit of getting back up after being knocked down.
Creating music was one of Taylor's greatest joys in life; he was a marimbist, a pianist, a flautist, and a guitarist over the years, and the lyrics he wrote were raw, haunting, and cerebral. Music gave him the opportunity to experience the world beyond his hometown as part of the Music City Drum Corps in 2011. Passionate and intense, Taylor cared deeply for his family and friends. With warmth, empathy, and abundant generosity, he strove to better the lives of those around him and sought to be someone to whom others could turn for support. He wore his heart on his sleeve and was a vibrant, vivid figure with a blindingly bright future ahead of him that he forged with burning resolve and unyielding defiance.
From a young age, he was an autodidact, teaching himself whatever caught his interest to satisfy his own searing curiosity. This extraordinary self-motivation and self-discipline gave him the ability to not only recover but continuously triumph after being laid low. At the start of 2022, he was living in an RV as he took online courses in Cloud Computing at Western Governors University. By January the next year, he and his partner April had bought a beautiful house together that they spent the next year turning into a truly wonderful home.
At the time of his passing, Jack was a Cloud Services Engineer. He held many positions over the course of his career in IT, including working as a Cloud Support Technician, a Cloud Migration Lead, and a Lead Cloud Engineer. He never stopped pushing himself, and given time to realize his limitless potential, his full list of achievements would have been overwhelmingly long.
Jack will be remembered for his sense of humor, which alternated between wry and goofy, and his hugs, which were always perfect and exactly what you needed. He will be remembered for his laugh, his smile, and his refusal to be anyone or anything less than his whole self. He will be remembered for his creativity, stubbornness, and perseverance. And he will be remembered for who he was in the moments that mattered.
Above all, Taylor was unequivocally, unconditionally, and unwaveringly loved by his family, who remain immensely proud of his character, his intelligence, and his creativity, as well as his numerous achievements. Colorful and singular, there has never been and never will be another like him. One of a kind, the world is duller for his absence.
No services will be held, and in lieu of flowers, the family asks that you consider sending a donation to the National Alliance on Mental Illness at https://www.nami.org/.
If you or someone you know is struggling, please reach out for help. The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7 for free simply by calling or texting 988. Your call is confidential, and you are not alone.
This obituary was written by his loving sister, who wishes more than anything that he was here to read it.
Berryhill Funeral Home assisted the family.
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