Daniel Franklin Cox: Difference between revisions

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{{CoxFamilyLine}}
{{CoxFamilyLine}}
{{IndividualAndParents|Individual=[[Daniel Franklin Cox]]|Father=[[John Nelson Cox]]|Mother=[[Parthenia Elizabeth Janes]]|Family=John Nelson and Parthenia Elizabeth Cox}}
{{IndividualAndParents|Individual=[[Daniel Franklin Cox]]|Father=[[John Nelson Cox]]|Mother=[[Parthenia Elizabeth Janes]]|Family=John Nelson and Parthenia Elizabeth Cox|Relevance=0}}


;Spouse
;Spouse
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:20 Jul 1935
:20 Jul 1935
:Kinta, Haskell Co., Oklahoma
:Kinta, Haskell Co., Oklahoma
;Burial
:[[Source:San Bois Cemetery, Kinta, Haskell County, Oklahoma|San Bois Cemetery, Kinta, Haskell County, Oklahoma]]
==Notes==
Daniel Franklin Cox died during the Dust Bowl, just about 3 months after the largest blizzards of the era on Black Sunday (April 14, 1935). Speculation regarding his cause of death has run the gamut of drunken stupor, to suicide, to murder. What is generally agreed upon is that he was hit by a train, and that he was in debt, but how that came to be is not publicly known. Close family, that might have known something of the matter, has generally avoided discussing the subject. After his death, the family emigrated to California. There is reported to have been a problem with alcoholism among the Cox men generally, and this is no less true for Daniel Franklin Cox than it was for others. (Teetotalers among the Cox men have tended to long outlive their less sober relatives.)


==Sources==
==Sources==
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<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Oklahoma, County Marriages, 1890-1995, 004532818, page 195 of 440.jpg|Oklahoma, County Marriages, 1890-1995, 004532818, page 195 of 440
File:United States, World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918, Oklahoma, Haskell County; A-V, page 902 of 3942.jpg|United States, World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918, Oklahoma, Haskell County; A-V, page 902 of 3942
File:1900 U.S. Census - Red Oak, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, page 28 of 42.jpg|1900 U.S. Census - Red Oak, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, page 28 of 42
File:1900 U.S. Census - Red Oak, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, page 28 of 42.jpg|1900 U.S. Census - Red Oak, Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, page 28 of 42
File:1910 U.S. Census - ED 84, Beaver, Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 30 of 50.jpg|1910 U.S. Census - ED 84, Beaver, Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 30 of 50
File:1910 U.S. Census - 0087, Center, Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 13 of 31.jpg|1910 U.S. Census - 0087, Center, Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 13 of 31
File:1920 U.S. Census - , Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 284 of 1150.jpg|1920 U.S. Census - , Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 284 of 1150
File:1920 U.S. Census - , Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 284 of 1150.jpg|1920 U.S. Census - , Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 284 of 1150
File:1930 U.S. Census - 0002, Beaver, Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 7 of 16.jpg|1930 U.S. Census - 0002, Beaver, Haskell, Oklahoma, Page 7 of 16
File:Headstone of Daniel F. Cox.jpg|Headstone of [[Daniel Franklin Cox]].
File:Headstone of Daniel F. Cox 2.jpg|Headstone of [[Daniel Franklin Cox]].
</gallery>
</gallery>

Latest revision as of 20:28, 22 October 2018

Cox Family Line
J-L70
William Cox
John Cox
Daniel Root Cox
John Nelson Cox
Daniel Franklin Cox
Marvin Luther Cox
Ronald J Cox
Sean Marvin Cox
  John Nelson Cox (family)
Daniel Franklin Cox  
0 Parthenia Elizabeth Janes
Spouse
Katherine Arnetta Harris (family)
16 May 1909
Haskell Co., Oklahoma

Data

Birth
30 Mar 1893
Poteau, Leflore Co., Oklahoma
Death
20 Jul 1935
Kinta, Haskell Co., Oklahoma
Burial
San Bois Cemetery, Kinta, Haskell County, Oklahoma

Notes

Daniel Franklin Cox died during the Dust Bowl, just about 3 months after the largest blizzards of the era on Black Sunday (April 14, 1935). Speculation regarding his cause of death has run the gamut of drunken stupor, to suicide, to murder. What is generally agreed upon is that he was hit by a train, and that he was in debt, but how that came to be is not publicly known. Close family, that might have known something of the matter, has generally avoided discussing the subject. After his death, the family emigrated to California. There is reported to have been a problem with alcoholism among the Cox men generally, and this is no less true for Daniel Franklin Cox than it was for others. (Teetotalers among the Cox men have tended to long outlive their less sober relatives.)

Sources