Wednesday, October 30, 2019

The 14 Children of James William Cox and Mary Elizabeth Mitchell - Child 5 & 6

#5
Mary Ellen Cox
1869-1962

      Mary Ellen Cox, the third daughter of James William Cox and Mary Elizabeth (Mitchell) Cox, was born in the wintertime, December 6, 1869.  At age twenty-one, she was married September 11, 1890 to William Cornelius Stewart.   “Willie” Stewart was the son of John Franklin Stewart and Catherine R. Douglass.   They had five children: 

1)      James Adrian Stewart; born June 26, 1891; died
2)      Bertie Stewart, born April 5, 1894;
3)      Mabel Stewart, born Feb 25, 1895;
4)      Ola Myrtle Stewart, born May 1, 1897,
5)      Zelphia Brenis “Zeffie” born Mar 15, 1900.

      After W. C. Stewart’s death in 1914, Mary Ellen married Frank Crawford on October 30, 1915, and when he died, she married James Christian on October 31, 1933.   Mary Ellen was a widow when she died of a stroke at age ninety-two, on May 31, 1962, at her home on Route 3, Beaver Dam. She was buried June 2 in the Stewart Family Cemetery, near White Run, Kentucky.  Her daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Hocker, signed her death certificate. 

 Family members always recall and never fail to mention the “little jig” she performed at age seventy-one on the occasion of the Golden Wedding Anniversary and Cox reunion that Loretta Westerfield gave for her parents, H. T. and Cinderella (Cox) Crowder in 1946. My grandparents attended and many family photos were taken that day.

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“MRS. MARY E. CHRISTIAN,
NONAGENARIAN, EXPIRES

                                    Mrs. Mary Ellen Cox Christian, 92, died at 4 p.m., Thursday
                        at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Myrtle Hocker, of Route 3, Beaver
                        Dam, following a lengthy illness.

                                    She was born December 6, 1869, in Ohio County, and was
                        a daughter of the late J. W. and Mary Elizabeth Mitchell Cox.  She
                        was a member of the Select Church of Christ and of the Rosine
                        Chapter No. 342 Order of the Eastern Star.

                                    Mrs. Christian was first married to Willie Stewart and later
                        to Jim Christian, both having preceded her in death.

                                    In addition to Mrs. Hocker, she is survived by another daughter,
                        Mrs. Brenis Davis, of Route 3, Beaver Dam; one son, James A. Stewart,
                        of Route 1, Cromwell; one sister, Mrs. Cinderella Crowder, of Rosine;
                        two brothers, O. C. Cox, of Murray, and J. N. Cox, of Troup, Texas;
14 grandchildren, 24 great-grandchildren, and four great-great grandchildren.

                                    Funeral services were held at 1 p.m., Saturday, June 2, at the
                        Rosine Baptist Church, with the Rev. Ernest Griffin, pastor, of the
                        Barnett’s Creek Baptist Church, officiating.  Burial was in the Stewart
                        Cemetery at White Run.

                                    Pallbearers were Noble Stewart, Stanley Allen, Roscoe Leisure,
                        Sandall Thomas Crowder, and Pen Beck.

Casebier Funeral Home, Beaver Dam, was in charge of arrangements”.
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      Loretta Westerfield passed along an obituary for Aunt Mary’s youngest daughter, Brenis Zeffie Moseley:
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“Mrs. Zeffie Moseley

                                    Beaver Dam – Mrs. Zeffie Stewart Moseley, 71, of Route 2,
                        died at 10 p.m., Wednesday, June 30, at her home following an
                        apparent heart attack. 

                                    Mrs. Moseley was born March 15, 1900, in Ohio County
                        and was a member of Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Baizetown.

                                    Survivors include her husband, S. A. Moseley, McHenry
two daughters, Mrs. Willie Bratcher, Horse Branch, and Mrs.
James Howell, Highland, Indiana; one son, Orel E. Iler,
Owensboro; four grandchildren: give great-grandchildren; one
 sister, Mrs. Arol Hocker, Beaver Dam, and a brother, James A.
 Stewart, Cromwell; six stepsons and five stepdaughers.

                                    Funeral services were held at 2 p.m., Saturday, July 3,
 at the William L. Danks Funeral Home.  The Rev. Arnett Williams,
pastor of Concord Baptist Church officiated, and burial was in
            Sunnyside Cemetery.”

~.~

      Loretta wrote:  “This is Aunt Mary’s youngest daughter.  Uncle Newton will not recognize her by this name.  She used the name Brenis until she married her third husband.

      This week, December 5, 2008, I received a package with photos of Aunt Mary and her children from Pat Drake (Mrs. Robert Drake) of Cromwell, KY.

~.~

# 6
Gabriel Netter Cox
1871-1924

      Gabriel Netter Cox, the third son of James William and Mary Elizabeth (Mitchell) Cox, was born at Select, December 10, 1871 in Ohio County, Kentucky.  He was twenty-five when he married Leva Eunice Howard on Christmas Day, December 1897 in Baizetown, a few miles north of Select.   Family and friends called him “Netter.”  He and his wife had four children. 

1)   Infant twins, Zada
2)   and Zoda, born in Butler County, Kentucky. Zoda may have died at birth.
3)   Leslie Ray Cox, the first son, was born at Select, Ohio County, Kentucky
                  on October 15, 1906.  He married Berneice Price at Light, Greene County,
                  Arkansas on January 10, 1927.
4)      The last and youngest son, Orville Clinton, was born in Walcott, Greene     
      County, Arkansas on February 17, 1911.  He married Provie Daugherty on   
      September 3, 1927 at Baizetown, Ohio County, Kentucky

      Loretta Westerfield wrote me that Uncle Netter moved to Arkansas when Ray was small and the folks in Kentucky didn’t get to see them as often as some of the other family members.

      In the 1900 Federal Census, Gabriel, called “Netter” by family and friends, and his wife, Levy E., lived in Cromwell, Ohio County, Kentucky.  He was twenty-eight and she was eighteen, and they said they had been married two years.  They had one child, a baby five months old, whom they had named Zada.   By the time of the 1910 census, the family was living in Arkansas and Ray was three years old.

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      One year later, there was a very sad occasion when little Zada died.  According to an article in the Hartford Republican, dated February 29, 1901, the following obituary appeared:

“-Smallhouse, Ky.  In Memory of Little Zada Cox, the baby of Mr.
and Mrs. G. N. Cox.  She departed this life January 21, 1901. God
in his wisdom saw fit to call her home and she is a bright and shining
angel in the land of glory.  She was thirteen months old.  She was a
bright-eyed babe and would sing in baby form; her sweet voice will
be missed by her parents. 

Her grandpa, Mr. J. W. Cox, never had the trial of giving up a darling
 baby, but Zada was the next to his own for he had been with her the
 past five months and she was a great pet with all the family.  We extend
our sympathy to her bereaved parents and a large number of relatives. D
~.~

      Ten years later, when the 1910 census was taken, Netter and Leva had moved to Greene County, Arkansas, and were reported living at Cache.  He was then thirty-eight and she was twenty-eight, and they had one little son, Ray Cox, age 3.  Netter listed his occupation there as “general farming.”

      When the WWI Draft Registration took place in 1917-1918, Gabriel Netter was past the age for registration, since he was already forty-seven.  The maximum age was forty-five for those who had to register in one of the three draft registrations held.  However, in the draft registration held in September 1918, his three younger brothers, Orlando Clay, Ira Clinton, and Jasper Newton were required to register.  Fortunately, the war ended before any of them were called up to serve.  Both Ira and Newton had previously joined the Army in the early 1900s, and their service record is written and outlined in their chapters in this book.

      When the census was taken in 1920, Gabriel Netter and Leva E. were listed as forty-eight and thirty-eight, living at Bryan, Greene County, Arkansas.  Their children were Ray and Orville, ages thirteen and nine.

      Four years later, Gabriel Netter Cox, a teacher and a Baptist, died an untimely death at age fifty-three at Beech Grove, Greene County, Arkansas on August 16, 1924, and is buried in Mt. Zion Cemetery there.  Greene County is located in Northeast Arkansas, about sixty-nine miles northwest of Memphis, Tennessee, and about seventeen miles from Paragould, the county seat of Greene County

      His widow, Leva Eunice Howard, was the daughter of Eli Howard and Martha Moore.  Leva was born May 29, 1881 in Butler County, Kentucky.  She outlived her husband by forty-eight years and died at Paragould, Greene County, Arkansas, August 14, 1972, and was buried beside her husband at Mt. Zion Cemetery.

      Recently this month of January 2009, I have discovered two new Cox cousins, the grandsons of Uncle Netter and Aunt Leva.  They are Ira Clinton Cox and his brother Robert Donald, who live in Jonesboro.  Of course, Ira was named for his father’s brother, Ira Clinton Cox, who died in Louisville, Kentucky.  James Cox, of Louisville, who I correspond with, is the son of the elder Ira Clinton Cox.  Ira Clinton Cox, II will be sending his family information to me soon and Robert and his wife, Ann, will be stopping by to see me on their way home from a vacation trip in South Texas about the last week in February.

Submitted by Janice Cox Brown, Coppell, Texas

Saturday, October 26, 2019

The 14 Children of James William Cox and Mary Elizabeth Mitchell - Child 3 and 4


#3 - Delana Jane Cox
1866-1925

Delana Jane Cox, born October 2, 1866, was the second daughter and third child of James William and Mary Elizabeth (Mitchell) Cox.  She married John Wesley Duvall, son of Captain Benjamin Duval and Caroline English, on Christmas Eve, December 24, 1885.  She was nineteen and he was twenty-four.  Delana and John Wesley had five children:

1)      Owen Duvall, born Oct. 1886; died 1908, age 22.
2)      Ola Duvall, born Oct. 1889, married Esley G. Allen; she died after 1928.
3)      Luther Duvall, born Aug. 1892; md. Sally Norman; he died in 1973, age 80.
4)      Leona Duvall, born July 1895; md. Wavy Liles; she died after 1925.
5)      Eura Lee Duvall, born 1898; died 1898, age 4 months.

      In the 1900 census, John and Delana were living at Cromwell, Ohio County, and said they had been married fourteen years, and that Delaney had borne five children, one of whom had died. John W. was shown as thirty-eight, and his wife was shown as thirty-three.  Owen, the oldest son was listed as thirteen, followed by Ola, ten; Luther, seven; and Leona, four. John’s occupation was listed as a farmer.

Ten years later in the 1910 census, the family had moved to Rosine and only two children are shown still at home:  Luther age seventeen, and his sister Leona, age fourteen.  Also, living in the home was their two-year old granddaughter, Gussie, the daughter of Esley and Ola Allen.

At one time in the early years of their marriage, my grandparents lived very near his sister, Delaney and her husband, John Duvall, and they often walked to church together.  Grandmother told me, “Well, they were having a protractor meeting – that’s what they called it back there, and they had it every night, night and day, for a week – maybe two weeks. (What we call now a revival.)  And Newton would always say, Well we’re going to church.”  And we would walk.  I guess that was two or three miles.  But we would go by his sister’s, Delaney, and they would be ready and we would all go.  That was when Gilbert was a baby.  And that was when Newton was on the farm and he would work so hard, all day long.  But before night, there was a protractor meeting going on at Baizetown.  And we carried Gilbert all the way.  (He was just a baby, which would have been about 1911). We’d come in and get ready to go to church, and Delaney and John would go with us.”

It was Aunt Delaney who was there to help my grandmother when my dad’s sister, Eula Mae, was born, and it was Delaney who came and stayed with her when my dad got kicked in the head by a horse and nearly died.  She held my dad down on grandmother’s big trunk while the doctor sewed up the gash in his head.  This happened when Eula Mae was just a baby, a few months old.  Aunt Delaney stayed to nurse him until he was out of danger, while my grandmother took care of Eula Mae, a small child about one year old.  My daughter now has this trunk in her home in Colorado.

“Delaney,” as my grandfather called his sister, died at age fifty-eight, March 18, 1925 in East St. Louis and is buried at Fairview, Baizetown, Ohio County.

Her death certificate was signed by Mrs. Ola Allen, 1023 Market (no town listed, but probably East St. Louis, Illinois).  Place of burial or removal was given as Rosine, Kentucky, and cause of death was given as Pellagra, which condition she had for four years.  Delana and John Wesley had five children, of whom only three lived to adulthood.

~.~

      Loretta Westerfield gave me an obituary for Aunt Delaney’s husband, John W. Duvall, who was living at Select when he died on Christmas Eve in 1921.  She told me she thought she had more information that she planned to send later.

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1921
~.~

J. W. Duvall Dead

                        Mr. J. W. Duvall, aged 60 years, 10 months, died at his home
                        in McHenry, at 9 o’clock a.m., Saturday, December 24, of
                        heart trouble, after an apparent illness of only a few minutes.

                        Brief services were held at home after which his remains were
                        conveyed to Fairview Cemetery, where another short service
                        took place on Monday.

                        Mr. Duvall was known to the most of his friends and
                        acquaintances as “Buck” and was highly esteemed by all
                        with whom he was acquainted.

                        He is survived by his widow, who was formerly a Miss Cox
                        and one son and two daughters, Luther Duvall of McHenry,
                        and Mrs. E. G. Allen and Mrs. A. W. Liles of East St. Louis,
                        Ill.

                        Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Allen and Mrs. A. W. Liles of East St.
                        Louis, Ill. were summoned to McHenry Sunday on account
                        of the death of J. W. Duvall.  Mr. Liles has returned to his home,
                        while Mrs. Liles will remain a month or longer.  Mr. and Mrs.
                        Allen will return Sunday”.
~.~

      Loretta mentioned that the Fairview Cemetery is near Baizetown.  The date of the Newspaper edition was not given, but according to the family group chart that Loretta filled out for me, he died on Christmas Eve, December 24, 1921.  His death certificate also lists the names of his parents.  His mother, Caroline English, was born in Ohio County, and her husband, “Captain” Benjamin Duvall was born in Kentucky, but no county was listed on the death certificate of J. W. Duvall.

      After her husband’s death, Delaney moved to Illinois to be near two of her daughters, and was living with her oldest daughter, Ola Allen, when she passed away in 1928.

<<>>

 4 - John William Cox

1868-1906

      John William Cox was born May 15, 1868, the second son and fourth child of James William and Mary Elizabeth (Mitchell) Cox.  He grew up on his father’s farm and in his early years helped him in his blacksmith shop.  At one time, according to a newspaper mention in The Centertown News, John and a friend of his formed a partnership and opened a blacksmith shop in Centertown. How long they operated it together is not known. 

      At age twenty, he married Ada Victoria Wilson on Christmas Day, December 25, 1888, at Mt. Pleasant, Ohio County.  Ada is the daughter of John Calvin Wilson, born Cromwell in 1842 and Martha Ann Liles, born 1837, both born in Ohio County

      John and Martha Ann (Liles) Wilson married in Ohio County on January 31, 1866.  In the 1900 census, they reported that they had been married thirty-four years, and had borne ten children, six of whom were still living in that year.  John Calvin Wilson is reported to have died on February 7, 1910, and Martha Ann on December 1, 1906.  No obituaries for them were found in the Hartford newspapers.  

      In the 1900 census, John Cox, 32, and Ada, 27, were living in Whitesville Town, Daviess County, Kentucky, where John was working for the railroad.  They had been married eleven years and had four children:  Edith, age 10; Esker J. age 8; Earnest W., age 5, and Talmadge J. Cox, age 2.

      John William and Ada Victoria (Wilson) Cox had seven children:

1)      Edith Cox, born 1889;
2)      Esker J. Cox, born 1893;
3)      Ernest E. Cox, born 1895;
4)      Talmadge Gordon Cox, born 1897;  Sep 1987
5)      Dora Cox, born 1901;
6)      Leonard Lynch Cox, born 1902; died April 6, 1991.
7)      John William Cox, Jr., born Mar 26, 1906; died Jan 4, 1971

      John William Cox died young at age thirty-eight, February 18, 1906 at Falls-of-Rough, fifteen miles northwest of Leitchfield, the county seat of Grayson County, Kentucky.  He is buried there in the Lone Star Cemetery. Descendants still get together each summer for a family reunion.  

      Sometime between 1906 and 1910, Ada was married a second time to Robert Awbrey and had two more children, Pauline, born about 1908 and Wilson born about 1914.  By the time of the 1920 census, Ada, age forty-eight, was divorced and had taken back her married name.  She was living in Rockvail, Breckenridge County, with three children:  John Cox, age thirteen; Pauline Awbrey, age eleven, and Wilson Awbrey, age six. The occupation for Ada and her son John was listed as “general farming.” 

      Ada Victoria (Wilson) Cox was sixty-one when she died in Jefferson County, Kentucky on May 2, 1935.  She was buried in Macedonia Cemetery, Breckenridge County.

      My cousin, Doris Goodwin, of Jonesboro, Indiana gave me several obituaries of the John Cox family.  The first obituary is for one of his sons, John William Cox (Jr.) and another one for her father, Gordon Talmadge, along with one for her mother, Stella (Burnette) Cox. 
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Kentucky Deaths
~.~

“John W. Cox (Jr.)

                        Fordsville. – John William Cox, 63, died Sunday in Wishram,
            Washington.

                        A member of the Elks Club and a Shriner, he is survived by
            his widow, Mrs. Dorothy Cox of Wishram; two daughters, Sarah and
            Juanita, both of San Francisco, Calif.; one son, Johnny of Ft. Lewis,
            Washington., seven grandchildren; two brothers, Leonard of Long
            Beach, Calif. and Gordon of Fordsville.

                        Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. at the Macedonia
            Cemetery, conducted by the Rev. Freeman Powell.  Friends may call
at the Phillips Funeral Home after 7 p.m. today.   (No date or name
of newspaper was given ).”
~.~

      Doris Goodwin furnished another obituary of John William Cox, Jr. and one for her father – Talmadge Gordon Cox.  The second obituary for John W. Cox, Jr. contains more information:
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Obituary
~.~

                        John W. Cox, a railway conductor for SP&S Railroad Company,
died at his home in Wishram January 4, 1970.  He was born at
Falls of Rough, KY March 22, 1906.  He served with the Fifth
Tank Co., U.S. Army from 1924 to 1926.

                        He was a member of Oriental Lodge No. 74 AM&FM Spokane
Chapter No. 163 OES, Scottish Rite Bodies and El Katif Shrine
all of Spokane, and a member of the Elks Lodge of White Salmon.

                        He is survived by his widow, Dorothy, a son, Pvt. John Cox III of
U. S. Army and two daughters, Mrs. J. S. (Sarah) Vigallon of
Newark, CA and Mrs. R. H. (Wonnetoh) Sperling of Vandenberg
AFB, CA; one stepson, Michael Fedora of Portland, OR, and a 
stepdaughter, Sandra Evans of Wishram.  Two brothers, Gordon
Cox of Fordsville, KY and Leonard Cox of Long Beach, CA, and
one sister, Pauline Erhart of Crestwood, KY, as well as seven 
grandchildren and two step-grandchildren, who survive.

Funeral services were held Wednesday at the Wishram Community 
Church with the Rev. Robert Leisy officiating.  Interment will be at 
Fordsville, KY.
~.~

The obituary of Talmadge Gordon Cox, father of Doris (Cox) Goodwin has the date of Sept. 15, 1987 at the bottom of the newspaper clipping:

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Talmadge G. Cox
~.~

                           Talmadge Gordon Cox, 89, 4621 S. Race St., Marion, died
                        at 12:50 p.m., Tuesday, in his home.

                           Mr. Cox, born in Breckenridge, Ky., was an Army veteran
                        of World War I.  He was a self-employed timber man and a
                        member of the American Legion, Owensboro, Ky., and
                        Masonic Lodge, Fordsville, Ky.

                           He is survived by his wife, Inez, Owensboro, KY; two sons,
                        Willard, Fordsville, Ky. and Stanley, Gas City; two daughters,
                        Mrs. Willard (Jean) Slater and Mrs. Doris Bratcher, both of
                        Marion, In.; a brother, Leonard, Long Beach, Calif.; 26 grand-
                        children; and 28 great-grandchildren.

                           Services will be at 2 p.m., Friday, in the Harl Funeral Home,
                        Fordsville, Ky., with burial in the Macedonia Cemetery,
                        Vanzant, Ky.

                           The Jay-Swift & Storey Funeral Home, 400 E. Main St., Gas
                        City, is in charge of local arrangements.                                           
                                                                                        Sept. 15, 1987
~.~

      Doris also sent me this obituary clipping recently on March 6, 2009 for her mother, who died August 7, 1969, in Owensboro, Daviess County, Kentucky.

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Mrs. Gordon Cox
~.~

“Fordsville. - Services for Mrs. Stella Cox, 69, who
died Thursday, will be held at 2 p.m. today at Macedonia
Baptist Church, conducted by the Rev. Paul Whitler, Jr. 
Burial will be in the church cemetery.   Friends may call at
the Phillips Funeral Home."

~.~

      Before his death, April 6, 1991, I corresponded for several years with Leonard Lynch Cox, the son of John and Ada Cox.  Leonard and his wife Mary lived in Long Beach, California.  He visited my grandparents at their home several summers and made at least one visit to our farm.  I remember that he was so impressed with the size of the Brahman bull we called Homer, and always asked about him in his letters to me. 

      My husband and I along with our little daughter Amy Elizabeth visited Leonard and Mary one summer at Long Beach.  Leonard proudly showed us the lemon and orange trees that he grew in his back yard. He and I happily kept up with each other through our correspondence.  I liked him a lot!  He and Mary had lived in Los Angeles County for six years, according to his death certificate.  Mary contacted me when he died, and I asked her to send me a copy of his obituary, which she did.  I presume the Press-Telegram is the local newspaper from Long-Beach.  He died from a heart attack.

~.~

      An excerpt from one of Leonard’s letters to me, written from their home at 4232 Walnut Avenue, Long Beach, California on March 23, 1977:

            “Hello everybody down there:

            I am happy to be writing to you, because I almost missed ever knowing you.
            I am out here in the patio being serenaded by my mocking birds.  They are
            delightful, and I am trying to be quiet so they won’t fly away.

            Now that spring is here again, I’ll bet you all are busy after all that cold
            weather.  And I was thinking about all the folks back east while I was so
            comfortable out here.  We went to San Francisco for Thanksgiving, and
            found it real cold up there, and was glad to get back to our warm south.
            And then we spent Christmas here in Hollywood with Mary’s folks.  And I
didn’t go to Kentucky last year, but may go this summer, don’t know yet.
I believe you told me they have a motel in Troup now.  I asked that because
if we ever come through there again, we would want to stop there and clean
up, and then spend a couple of days with you all. 

“Conrad, do you still have that big bull?  I have often thought of the way
you handled that big rascal.  I believe he was smarter than most, he sure
seemed to know who was boss around there.  It was all so interesting, if I
had been feeling well, and all that driving really did me in.  I would like
very much to do some traveling during the next few years, back east, that is,
I would like to look up my relatives and other people I used to know; what
else can I do?

Jerri,(my nickname) how is your Grandma Cox getting along?  And I’ll bet
 your dad is doing a lot of fishing and hunting since he retired; how I envy him.
I quail-hunted for years and years  in the deserts until conditions changed, and 
now it’s too much trouble.

We thought Amy was a cute and very smart little girl; how is she doing in
school now?  That goes for Jennifer, too.  You are very lucky.

Well, I have to take Mary to get her hair fixed – she is very intelligent and
Can do almost anything, but she can’t drive a car, just afraid, I think.  Anyhow,
I’m glad now that she can’t.  Whoops, my paper is too short, I see.  So long,
I miss your delightful and inspiring letters.
                                                                       
                                                     Leonard”

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Press- Telegram
Tuesday, April 9, 1991
~.~
Obituaries

Cox,  Leonard L.  Former owner of A-1
                                        Welding and Repair.  Survived by his
                                        wife of 62-1/2 years, Mary Barnett Cox;
                                        sister, Pauline Earhardt; several nieces
                                        and nephews.  Private family services
                                        were held.   Hunter Mortuary.

~.~

      For the past ten years or so, Doris (Cox) Goodwin of Indiana, the daughter of Talmadge Gordon Cox, and I have talked to each other by phone several times a year and she has passed along good information on the John Cox family to expand this chapter in the final draft of the Cox family story, including the Cox Family Reunion article in Rosine, Kentucky, on Wednesday, August 14, 1940.

      In every family there always seems to be one person chosen and called on to be the “keeper” and finder of the family ancestors.  It must be in our genes.  Doris is the person who fulfills this undertaking in the John William Cox (Sr.) family. Just like me, and just like Cinderella Cox and her daughter, Loretta Westerfield. 

~.~

Submitted by Janice Cox Brown, Coppell, Texas

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

The 14 Children of James William Cox and Mary Elizabeth Mitchell - Child 2

#2 - Susanah Miranda Cox
1863-1910

      Susanah Miranda, born July 18, 1863 was the second child of James William and Mary Elizabeth Cox.  She was named after her two grandmothers – Susannah Miranda Cox and Susannah C. Acton.  When she was eighteen, Susannah, called “Susie,” married John Henry Stewart, twenty, September 13, 1881.  He was the son of John F. Stewart and Catherine R. Douglas. Susie’s name is written in her father’s Bible as “Susanah M. Cox.”

      During the next twenty-five years, this couple had eight children of whom only five lived to maturity.

1)      Oscar Newton, born July 1882; died age 60, 1943
2)      Minnie, born Oct. 1885; died age 33, 1919
3)      Azro B., born 1883 and died the same day.
4)      Elza Wayne, born 1887;  died 1899, age 11 years
5)      Estill L., born 1890; lived two days.
6)      Roy Thompson Stewart, born Nov. 1892, (who grew up and married my
grandmother’s sister, Ella Mae Smith);  died 1971, age 78
7)      Warren C. Stewart, born Sep. 1894; died 1916, age 22,
8)      Ethel Catherine Stewart, born Jan. 1897; died 1946, age 49

When the census taker visited the Cromwell community in 1900, he stopped at the home of John Henry and Susie M. Stewart.  John was thirty-eight and Susie was thirty-six, and they said they had been married eighteen years.  Susie had borne eight children, five of whom were living at the time.  Children listed in the home were Oscar N., 17; Minnie F., 14; Roy T., 7; Warren C., 5; and Ethel C., 3.  John Henry’s occupation was farming.

By the time of the 1910 census, the family was living at Rosine, and Oscar and Minnie no longer lived in their parent’s home.  More than likely they had married and started families of their own.  Three children, Roy T., 17; Warren C., 15, and Ethel C., 13, were still living at home.

The census of 1910 was taken in April, and at that time, Susie had been ill for several years.  Four months later her condition worsened and she died August 26, 1910.  She was only forty-seven at her death, and she and John Henry had been married almost twenty-nine years.  She was buried in Fairview East Cemetery, Ohio County.  It was a very sad occasion for the entire family.

Her obituary was found in the Hartford Republican, dated Friday, September 2, 1910 on page five and another mention under the community of Select, dated September 4:

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SELECT
~.~

                        “Sept. 4 – Mrs. Susie Stewart, wife of J. H. Stewart, died at her
 residence this place Thursday night, August 25th of consumption.
 She was a member of the Christian church and was a good
 Christian woman. 

She leaves a husband and five children, and a host of friends to
 mourn her loss.”
~.~
“In Memory
~.~

                                    Susan M. Stewart, daughter of J. W. and Mary E. Cox,
                        departed this life Aug. 25, 1910, after being a great sufferer for
                        five years.

                                    The deceased was married to J. H. Stewart, Sept. 16th,
                        1881, to this union was born eight children, six sons, and two
                        daughters.  Three sons and two daughters survive her, three
                        sons having preceded to the world beyond.  She was 47 years
                        of age at the time of her death.  She joined the church at Old
Fairview in early girlhood and lived a consistent member of the
same.  She had been a member of the church at Select, since the 
disbanding of the church at Old Fairview.  She was buried at the
Keown burying ground next day in the presence of a large
congregation of friends and relatives. 

Funeral services were conducted by Rev. Birch Shields,
who preached the funeral sermon from Rev. 21-4, after which
her remains were laid to rest to await the resurrection morn.”

~.~

      John Henry later remarried Ida Luck on December 23, 1919, who helped make a home for his three children who were still in their teens.

      Loretta Westerfield sent me the following news clipping from one of the Ohio County newspapers regarding Roy T. Stewart, son of John Henry and Susie Cox.  I want to include it here because my grandfather in 1962 suggested I write his nephew, Roy Stewart, to ask for some information on my grandmother’s grandfather, Thomas Smith, who died in the Civil War.  Roy T. Stewart married my grandmother’s sister, Ella Jennie Smith.  Roy’s letter was prompt and it gave me several clues to follow up that I had not known before.  I still have that letter written by hand on old-time, lined tablet paper.

~.~

Cromwell Lodge No. 692

Roy T. Stewart, Master

                       Cromwell Lodge No. 692,  Cromwell,  met  on  St.  John’s  Day,
                        December 27, 1939,  and  elected  and  installed  officers  for  the
                        ensuing year.  Those so chosen were:

                           Roy T. Stewart, master; R. C. Burgess, senior warden, Hudanll
                        LeMasters, junior warden; Otha West, treasurer. The new secretary,
Bro. Past Master Elmer Embry, acted as installing officer.  Bro. 
Past Master R. C. Burgess then installed Bro. Embry as secretary and the
following appointed officers:  H. N. Phelps, senior deacon; D. Nelson,
junior deacon; Owen T. Wallace, senior steward;  J. W. Martin, junior
steward; Clarence James, chaplain, and Hilley Kessinger, tiler.

   Our new worshipful master, Bro. Roy T. Stewart, is an ardent Mason,
is taking the duties of his office seriously and members of the lodge 
confidently look forward to a year of progress under his capable
guidance.  He will have the support of a loyal corps of officers, eager
to assist in helping the lodge to prosper.  An increased attendance of 
our members will be highly pleasing to officers of the lodge and spur them
on to greater achievements .

   Stated meetings of Cromwell Lodge are held on the 4th Monday each month, and we welcome visiting.  Craftsmen.-E Embry, secretary.

~.~

My aunt told me that Roy Stewart was a mail carrier in Ohio County for many years, and also that he liked to sing.  I believe she said he sang with a group and she mentioned, too, that he was a friend of Bill Monroe, who came to their house on several occasions.  At one time, I am fairly certain that my grandfather said that their farm adjoined the farm of Bill Monroe’s father as they were growing up.  He had several tales he told us about the Cox and Monroe boys.

Submitted by Janice Cox Brown, Coppell, Texas