Born in Auburn, Alabama, Lily Ross Taylor developed an interest in Roman studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, earning an A.B. in 1906. She went to Bryn Mawr College as a graduate student that year, and received her Ph.D. in Latin in 1912. Her dissertation advisor was Tenney Frank. From 1912 until 1927, she taught at Vassar, and, in 1917, she became the fourth female Fellow of the American Academy in Rome.[4]
Local Cults in Etruria (Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome, vol. 2). Rome: American Academy in Rome, 1923. Pp. xi + 258 + fold-out map.
The Voting Districts of the Roman Republic: The Thirty-five Urban and Rural Tribes (Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome, vol. 20) Rome: American Academy in Rome, 1960. Re-issued with new material authored by Jerzy Linderski, 2013.[9]
1935. C.E. Goodfellow. Roman citizenship; a study of its territorial and numerical expansion from the earliest time to the death of Augustus. T.R.S. Broughton}
1934 A. Kirsopp Lake Michels. Campana supellex: the pottery deposit at Minturnae. {co-directed with L.A. Holland}
1934. B. M. Marti. The adoration of the Roman emperor from Augustus to Charlemagne.
1937 R. E. Deutsch. The pattern of sound in Lucretius.
1939. S. M. Savage. The cults of ancient Trastevere.
1939 J. I. M. Tait. Philodemus' influence on the Latin poets.
1940 D. Tolles. The banquet-libations of the Greeks.
1940 H. E. Russell (later White). Insignia of office as rewards in the Roman Republic: Advancement in rank under the Roman republic as a reward for the soldier and the public prosecutor.
1951 M.W. Hoffman. The membership of the four major colleges of priests from 44 B.C. to 37 A.D. {co-directed with T.R.S. Broughton}
1952 L. E. Hoy. Political influence in Roman prosecutions, 75 B.C. to 60 B.C.: with a listing of the trials.
1961 B. M. RawsonThe names of children in Roman imperial epitaphs: a study of social conditions in the lower classes.
Broughton, T.R.S., in Briggs, W.W., and W.M. Calder III (eds.), Classical Scholarship: A Biographical Encyclopedia (New York and London 1990) pp. 454–461; and in Briggs, Jr., Ward W. (ed.) Biographical Dictionary of North American Classicists (Greenwood Press: Westport, Connecticut and London, 1994) pp. 636–638.
^"United States Social Security Death Index". FamilySearch. Retrieved July 29, 2014. Lily Taylor, Nov 1969; citing U.S. Social Security Administration, Death Master File, database (Alexandria, Virginia: National Technical Information Service, ongoing).