Jesse N. COX, who has
been a resident of Burnside Township since 1855, and has lived on
his present farm for the past twenty-two years, was
born in Trigg County, Ky., in 1838. His father,
Jeremiah Cox, was a farmer, and was born in Stewart County, Tenn., in
1806, not far from where
his son was born. Jeremiah Cox married
Obedience Holland, a native of Kentucky. They lived a few years after
their union in Stewart County, Tenn.,
and then moved to Galloway
County, Ky., where they lived on their own farm until the fall of 1855,
when they sold out and came to Johnson County,
bringing with them
their family of nine children, seven sons and two daughters. The
journey of one hundred and ten miles was accomplished with their
own
horse-team and covered wagon, and they drove before them their cattle.
At that time they had but $800 and their stock, but managed to purchase
two hundred acres of land with improvements, including a
log house, in Tunnel Hill Township, for $800. This they made their
permanent home, and
there the mother died in September, 1855, one month
after their arrival, aged forty-three years. The father was married the
second time, to Sarah Biggers,
of Illinois, and lived twenty-two years
after the death of his first wife, dying in 1878, aged sixty-two years.
One son, William B., who died in 1865, aged twenty-five, left a widow
and three children. There are now living four male members of the
family, viz: Perry, a farmer of Burnside Township; Jesse N.;
Richard
S.; and Franklin, a farmer of Burnside Township.
Mr.
Cox, of this sketch, had but little education in his youth, and that
was obtained in the subscription schools. He was when a boy inured to
hard
labor, and remained at home until he was twenty years old, and
then worked on the farm summers, and taught school some eight winters,
partly before
and partly after his marriage. He was married when
twenty-five years old, February 3, 1863, to Miss Caroline Rushing, a
daughter of Nathan and Mary
(Veal) Rushing, who came from Kentucky to
Illinois before 1850. Mr. and Mrs. Cox first bought ninety acres of
land in Tunnel Hill Township, where
they lived six years, when they
sold and moved to Burnside Township to their present farm. At first
this farm consisted of sixty-five acres, but five years
later they
added to it fifteen acres, and in 1881 eighty-five acres more were
added, and since then twelve acres more, making a farm of one hundred
and seventy-seven acres, which cost from $8 to $16.66 per acre. They
at first lived in a small frame house, which was built in 1870, in the
forest, and was a onestory structure, 14x16 feet in size, containing a
large fireplace with its chimney built outside. The house stood on
pedestals of stone and had but one
room, and as there was that winter a
storm of sleet which so loaded the trees that there was danger of their
falling on this little house, Mr. Cox came to
his empty cabin and
felled the trees that overhung it. The farm was all timber land, and
the one hundred acres now under cultivation represent many hard
days'
work and toil, most of which he has done himself. He has been
a man of great strength and endurance, and is still well preserved and
taking a
merited rest. In 1890 he built his present commodious
two-story frame house, 16x36 feet, having seven large rooms and a fine
double porch the entire
length.
Our subject's first
wife died April 14, 1872, leaving no children. His second wife was Miss
Nancy Reeves, born in Texas and who came to Illinois
in 1871. Her
father was Absalom Reeves, and her mother Eliza C. Blaxton. both of
Tennessee. She has two brothers, William Reeves, a farmer of
Burnside
Township, and Henry B. Reeves, a merchant of Mound City, Ill. Mr. and
Mrs. Cox have buried two children, William T., aged four, and
Louisa
E., aged one year, and there are now living four sons and two
daughters, viz: Charles B., seventeen years old; Mary O., fifteen;
Lloyd F.,
fourteen; Harvey A., thirteen; Orpha J., ten; and Henry Lee,
nine; all are at home and attending school.
Mr. Cox is a Master
Mason, and a Democrat. Religiously he is a free thinker, and he has
been a very successful man in his lifetime, which he attributes
to
skillful management, economical living and hard labor.