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COX
CEMETERY
Old
Ocean Springs
LOCATION:
This cemetery is abandoned. It was formerly located in the SW/4,
SW/4 of Section 19, T7S-R8W on lands owned by George Allen Cox
(1811-1887). Presently this site is north of Bienville Boulevard
(US 90) in an area west of the PFG Precisicion Optics at 733
Bienville and east of the Oak Cove Townhouse development.
HISTORY:
The Cox Cemetery was a family burial plot for members of the Cox and
VanCleave families. It was named for George Allen Cox (1811-1887).
Cox was an entrepreneurial pioneer at Ocean Springs. He was born in
Tennessee in 1811, and settled in Holmes County (1838) where he ran
a sawmill. He married a widow, Sarah Ann Sheppard, in 1850. They
owned a plantation in Yazoo County, and a summer home, Magnolia
Grove, on the beach at Ocean Springs, which they discovered in the
early 1850s.
By
1854, Cox was well established at Ocean Springs. He owned the local
newspaper, The Gazette, and had substantial real estate
holdings in the area. In December 1859, Cox acquired 78.35 acres
from Desoto Avenue north to Fort Bayou,
and
from Martin east to Church Street. This tract was the site of the
later Cox homestead and burial plot. Cox built a home on Fort Bayou
and constructed a wharf to handle
charcoal and other forest products which came down the bayou from
the Bluff Creek area to the northeast.
Cox's stepdaughter, Eliza Sheppard (1842-1912), married R.A.
VanCleave (1840-1908) of Yazoo City. They settled at Ocean Springs
in 1867. Mr. VanCleave built a general store along Bluff Creek in
1868 to supply forest workers in that area. In time the settlement
took his name, VanCleave. At Ocean Springs, R.A. VanCleave was
postmaster (1872-1882), ran a mercantile store, and built a hotel
near the L&N depot in May 1880.
In the 1930s, a WPA work party exhumed the remains of the Cox
and VanCleave family members buried at the Cox Cemetery, and moved
them to the VanCleave Family Plot at the Evergreen Cemetery.
REGISTER*
George
Allen Cox 1811 to August 2, 1887
Sarah
Ann Sheppard Cox 1820 to ?
Henry
VanCleave died at eight years
Walter
Haven Covington
Fannie
VanCleave Covington died 1893
Walter
Haven Covington (infant)
Ora
Mead Covington (infant)
*
from Vertalee Bradford VanCleave and Irma Covington Tate
REFERENCES:
Regina
Hines, Ocean Springs, 1892, 2nd Edition (Lewis
Printing Services: Pascagoula - 1991), pp. 9-10.
Bettie
J. Marsh, The Neaves Story: The History of a Southern Family
in the 19th Century, (1979), pp., 4, 5, 98, and 100.
C.E.
Schmidt, Ocean Springs French Beachhead, (Lewis
Printing Services: Pascagoula, Mississippi-1972), p. 29.
The
History of Jackson County, Mississippi,
"Robert Adrian VanCleave", (Jackson County
Genealogical Society: Pascagoula - 1989), pp. 376-377.
The
Pascagoula Democratic-Star,
"The Entirely New VanCleave Hotel", June 25, 1880, p. 1.
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