Revision as of 21:41, 28 December 2024 editIndy beetle (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers46,956 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit | Revision as of 18:37, 29 December 2024 edit undoIndy beetle (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers46,956 editsNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
== Early life == | == Early life == | ||
Jonathan Elwood Cox was born on November 1, 1856 in ]. Two years later his father hired as superintendent of ] in Guilford County and moved the family there.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=90}} Cox was educated at New Garden, a business school in Baltimore, and at ].{{sfn|Ashe|1906|pp=90–91}} On October 23, 1878, he married Bertha Snow, with whom he would have one daughter.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=91}} | Jonathan Elwood Cox was born on November 1, 1856{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=90}} in ].<ref>{{cite web| url = https://100years.dukeendowment.org/leadership/jonathan-elwood-cox| title = Jonathan Cox| website = 100 Years : The Duke Endowment| publisher = The Duke Endowment| access-date = December 29, 2024}}</ref> Two years later his father hired as superintendent of ] in Guilford County and moved the family there.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=90}} Cox was educated at New Garden, a business school in Baltimore, and at ].{{sfn|Ashe|1906|pp=90–91}} On October 23, 1878, he married Bertha Snow, with whom he would have one daughter.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=91}} | ||
== Business career == | == Business career == | ||
In 1876, Cox took up work as a traveling salesman.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=91}} In 1880, he moved to High Point and assumed control over his father-in-law's lumber products business, building a factory to produce shuttle blocks and bobbin pins for textile mills.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=91}}{{sfn|Medlin|2023|pp=35–36}} | In 1876, Cox took up work as a traveling salesman.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=91}} In 1880, he moved to High Point and assumed control over his father-in-law's lumber products business, building a factory to produce shuttle blocks and bobbin pins for textile mills.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=91}}{{sfn|Medlin|2023|pp=35–36}} | ||
In 1891, Cox founded Commercial National Bank.<ref name= tomlin/> He was elected as the bank's first president and served in that capacity for 14 years.{{sfn|Ashe|1906|p=92}} | |||
== Political career == | |||
As his career in business grew more successful, Cox became increasingly involved in the Guilford County ].{{sfn|Medlin|2023|p=36}} The State Republican Convention unanimously nominated him to be its candidate in the ] as part of a strategy to win the support of the state's growing industrialist element.{{sfn|Medlin|2023|p=36}}{{sfn|Steelman|1964|pp=438–439}} Cox was not interested in running but accepted, telling a business associate, "ot that I expect to be elected, or want to be elected as to that matter, but you know my friends and my party might censure me if I quit the campaign just on the eve of the election and my political enemies will say that I ran."{{sfn|Steelman|1964|pp=439–440}} | |||
Cox's candidacy was praised by numerous furniture manufacturing executives in North Carolina.{{sfn|Medlin|2023|p=36}} Republican Party literature and his own statements emphasized his status as a "businessman candidate".{{sfn|Steelman|1964|pp=441–442}} He declared, "the business men of North Carolina are entitled to more voice in the business affairs of the State, and in the legislation affecting the business interests of the State," though he declined to "enter into any elaborate discussion of the political issues of the day."{{sfn|Steelman|1964|p=442}} Cox also encouraged fellow businessman ] to run for the ] ] as a Republican to strengthen the image of the party's pro-business platform, and they subsequently worked together to appeal to other businessmen for support.{{sfn|Steelman|1964|pp=443–444}} | |||
To counter Cox, Democrats portrayed him as too moderate on racial issues and "too busy with his bobbin trust".{{sfn|Medlin|2023|pp=36–37}} They also tied him to a labor dispute involving furniture factory workers in High Point in 1906 and accused him of being favorable to railroad companies, which were unpopular in the state at the time due to disputes over their rates.{{sfn|Steelman|1964|pp=445–446}} Cox ultimately lost the election to Democratic nominee ] by 37,342 votes.{{sfn|Steelman|1964|p=447}} | |||
== Later life == | == Later life == | ||
Cox died on March 28, 1932.<ref name= tomlin>{{cite news| last = Tomlin| first = Jimmy| title = The deceitful demise—Did Elwood Cox fake his own death?| newspaper = High Point Enterprise| date = February 3, 2024| url = https://www.hpenews.com/confidential/high-point-confidential-the-deceitful-demise-did-elwood-cox-fake-his-own-death/article_94bea6c7-e1eb-5645-bc28-864698872830.html| access-date = December 28, 2024}}</ref> | On January 18, 1932, the board of directors of Commercial National Bank announced that, amidst the fallout of the ], the bank would cease operations. Cox and other bank leaders received threats from the community over the bank closure. Shortly thereafter he fell ill with ]. He died on March 28, 1932. The timing of his death led to rumors circulating High Point that he had faked his own death to flee the country and avoid the fallout of the bank failure.<ref name= tomlin>{{cite news| last = Tomlin| first = Jimmy| title = The deceitful demise—Did Elwood Cox fake his own death?| newspaper = High Point Enterprise| date = February 3, 2024| url = https://www.hpenews.com/confidential/high-point-confidential-the-deceitful-demise-did-elwood-cox-fake-his-own-death/article_94bea6c7-e1eb-5645-bc28-864698872830.html| access-date = December 28, 2024}}</ref> | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
Line 17: | Line 26: | ||
* {{Cite book |editor-last=Ashe |editor-first=Samuel A'Court |title=Biographical History of North Carolina from Colonial Times to the Present |date=1906 |publisher=C. L. Van Noppen |location=Greensboro, N.C.|volume=VI|language=en|url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924092215460/}} | * {{Cite book |editor-last=Ashe |editor-first=Samuel A'Court |title=Biographical History of North Carolina from Colonial Times to the Present |date=1906 |publisher=C. L. Van Noppen |location=Greensboro, N.C.|volume=VI|language=en|url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924092215460/}} | ||
* {{cite book| last = Medlin| first = Eric| title = Sawdust in Your Pockets : A History of the North Carolina Furniture Industry| publisher = University of Georgia Press| date = 2023| location = Athens| isbn = 9780820365503}} | * {{cite book| last = Medlin| first = Eric| title = Sawdust in Your Pockets : A History of the North Carolina Furniture Industry| publisher = University of Georgia Press| date = 2023| location = Athens| isbn = 9780820365503}} | ||
* {{cite journal| last = Steelman| first = Joseph F.| title = Jonathan Elwood Cox and North Carolina's Gubernatorial Campaign of 1908| journal = The North Carolina Historical Review| volume = 41| issue = 4| pages = 436–447| date = October 1964| jstor = 23517842}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cox, J. Elwood}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Cox, J. Elwood}} |
Revision as of 18:37, 29 December 2024
Jonathan Elwood Cox (November 1, 1856 — March 28, 1932) was an American businessman and politician.
Early life
Jonathan Elwood Cox was born on November 1, 1856 in Rich Square, North Carolina. Two years later his father hired as superintendent of New Garden Boarding School in Guilford County and moved the family there. Cox was educated at New Garden, a business school in Baltimore, and at Earlham College. On October 23, 1878, he married Bertha Snow, with whom he would have one daughter.
Business career
In 1876, Cox took up work as a traveling salesman. In 1880, he moved to High Point and assumed control over his father-in-law's lumber products business, building a factory to produce shuttle blocks and bobbin pins for textile mills.
In 1891, Cox founded Commercial National Bank. He was elected as the bank's first president and served in that capacity for 14 years.
Political career
As his career in business grew more successful, Cox became increasingly involved in the Guilford County Republican Party. The State Republican Convention unanimously nominated him to be its candidate in the 1908 North Carolina gubernatorial election as part of a strategy to win the support of the state's growing industrialist element. Cox was not interested in running but accepted, telling a business associate, "ot that I expect to be elected, or want to be elected as to that matter, but you know my friends and my party might censure me if I quit the campaign just on the eve of the election and my political enemies will say that I ran."
Cox's candidacy was praised by numerous furniture manufacturing executives in North Carolina. Republican Party literature and his own statements emphasized his status as a "businessman candidate". He declared, "the business men of North Carolina are entitled to more voice in the business affairs of the State, and in the legislation affecting the business interests of the State," though he declined to "enter into any elaborate discussion of the political issues of the day." Cox also encouraged fellow businessman John Motley Morehead II to run for the United States House of Representatives 5th congressional district seat as a Republican to strengthen the image of the party's pro-business platform, and they subsequently worked together to appeal to other businessmen for support.
To counter Cox, Democrats portrayed him as too moderate on racial issues and "too busy with his bobbin trust". They also tied him to a labor dispute involving furniture factory workers in High Point in 1906 and accused him of being favorable to railroad companies, which were unpopular in the state at the time due to disputes over their rates. Cox ultimately lost the election to Democratic nominee William Walton Kitchin by 37,342 votes.
Later life
On January 18, 1932, the board of directors of Commercial National Bank announced that, amidst the fallout of the Great Depression, the bank would cease operations. Cox and other bank leaders received threats from the community over the bank closure. Shortly thereafter he fell ill with bronchial pneumonia. He died on March 28, 1932. The timing of his death led to rumors circulating High Point that he had faked his own death to flee the country and avoid the fallout of the bank failure.
References
- ^ Ashe 1906, p. 90.
- "Jonathan Cox". 100 Years : The Duke Endowment. The Duke Endowment. Retrieved December 29, 2024.
- Ashe 1906, pp. 90–91.
- ^ Ashe 1906, p. 91.
- Medlin 2023, pp. 35–36.
- ^ Tomlin, Jimmy (February 3, 2024). "The deceitful demise—Did Elwood Cox fake his own death?". High Point Enterprise. Retrieved December 28, 2024.
- Ashe 1906, p. 92.
- ^ Medlin 2023, p. 36.
- Steelman 1964, pp. 438–439.
- Steelman 1964, pp. 439–440.
- Steelman 1964, pp. 441–442.
- Steelman 1964, p. 442.
- Steelman 1964, pp. 443–444.
- Medlin 2023, pp. 36–37.
- Steelman 1964, pp. 445–446.
- Steelman 1964, p. 447.
Works cited
- Ashe, Samuel A'Court, ed. (1906). Biographical History of North Carolina from Colonial Times to the Present. Vol. VI. Greensboro, N.C.: C. L. Van Noppen.
- Medlin, Eric (2023). Sawdust in Your Pockets : A History of the North Carolina Furniture Industry. Athens: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820365503.
- Steelman, Joseph F. (October 1964). "Jonathan Elwood Cox and North Carolina's Gubernatorial Campaign of 1908". The North Carolina Historical Review. 41 (4): 436–447. JSTOR 23517842.