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Tag Archives: planning

Researching Isaac Cox: A Genealogy Journey

04 Sunday Jan 2026

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ancestry, Cox, family-history, Genealogy, Kentucky, planning, Winkler

It’s a new year for research and I have a new family unit to research. I am moving back one generation on my Cox line to Isaac Cox and Susannah Tomlinson. This research segment should prove to be a little challenging. Granted, there are several publications dating back over a hundred years detailing the history of Isaac and Susannah, however, I want to be thorough and verify and supplement that material with historical documents that might be available.

Isaac and Susannah lived in the eighteenth century. They, and their progeny, were pioneers in their own right. They pushed the boundaries of civilization into the western frontier. They were instrumental in developing the infrastructure and government in these newly settled areas. They also suffered tragic loss as a result of the risks they took. I am humbled to carry their DNA.

Last week I lamented the errors that currently exist on the public trees that confuse all the various Isaac Coxes that were peppered across the Colonies. This week I am starting the task of compiling documents specifically for my 6th great-grandfather Isaac Cox. Along the way I will likely also collect documents for his son who was commonly referred to as Colonel Isaac Cox. At times it could be difficult to determine which of the two men documents refer to. Knowing that both men died in Kentucky while it was still part of Virginia, I will start my search there and work my way backward in time.


One thing I have learned about genealogy is it is more than just history. It involves geography! One of the first documents I have found in the Full Text Search on FamilySearch is a Tax Records ledger for Jefferson County for 1799. It identifies parcels of land that were originally granted to Isaac Cox. Which Isaac Cox is unknown, however, the water course and county where the parcels were in 1799 are included. The ledger states the parcels are along the Green River and Rolling Fork and are in Hardin County. The Rolling Fork makes up the natural boundary between Hardin County and Nelson County. Hardin County was formed from Nelson County in 1792. This demonstrates the potential vastness of the Cox landholdings in early Kentucky.

Jefferson County Court minutes from 1784 names Isaac Cox as a “gentleman justice”. Gentleman Justices typically were not lawyers, but were respected large landowners in the community who presided over county courts, managing local affairs, petty disputes, and administering oaths. Think county commissioners on steroids. Because the elder Isaac Cox is believed to have died in 1783, this Isaac Cox was most likely his son.

A series of land transactions were made by the younger Isaac Cox and his wife Mary in Nelson County in 1787. Some county court minutes were found listing him as a justice in early 1788, as well. His will was written on September 6, 1786. It was presented in court on April 8, 1788.1 Some sources estimate his death to be March 31st which coincides with the attack on the Bland Ballard family.2 Isaac was present in County Court on March 12th. His death was sometime between March 12th and April 8th.

A good number of land deed transactions were recorded referencing “Isaac Cox, dec’d” after 1788. It proved to be a bit challenging to sort the documents, and the associated heirs, out, especially since the will for the elder Isaac doesn’t appear to be available and many of the beneficiaries overlap. One key detail found (or missing, as the case may be) is that the younger Isaac did not include his mother Susannah in his will. This is the determining factor I used to sort out which transactions belong to each estate.

In reviewing land deeds, there was one document that gave me pause. A power of attorney was drawn up for John Cox, George Cox, and Anne Cox Machan [McMahon], wife of William Machan [McMahon] on August 10, 1789. The concerning part was that in the body of the document, William’s wife is referred to as “Nancy”.3 In various written family histories, Isaac and Susannah have a daughter named Nancy and a daughter named Anne.4 Little is known about Nancy. One source says she married a Nathan Chalfant.5 More research needs to be completed to sort this detail out as no specific source was provided. Was this Nancy really a child of Isaac and Susannah or did she belong to some other couple? Was Anne’s name really “Nancy Anne” or “Anne Nancy”?

There were at least five deeds drawn up on the elder Isaac’s estate between 1789 and 1799. The first, dated May 29, 1789, did not include John, George, or Anne. This is likely because they were not local to Nelson County. At the time this deed was recorded, the above referenced power of attorney was put into place for subsequent transactions. This first deed included the following heirs at law: Susannah (the widow), and their children David, Gabriel, Jonathan, Mary, Benjamin, and Isaac’s widow Mary. The remaining four deeds did not include the younger Isaac’s widow. Also, there is no mention of Nancy or her heirs in any of the five deed transactions. These deeds account for nine of the children born to the older Isaac and Susannah.

It is not clear why Mary Enoch Cox May was not included on all of the land deed transactions for her father-in-law’s estate. She was named in a transaction dated June 19, 1801, with John and David Cox. She was later named in another transaction in January 1805, to one of the Cox grandsons. It could be that she granted a POA to her second husband William May who also was the Cox family attorney. Alternately, it could be due to the fact that she did remarry and she was no longer eligible as an heir.

An interesting manuscript about the early days of Nelson County, even before it was known as Nelson County, was penned by Nora Lee McGee and can be found on FamilySearch.6 Ms. McGee compiled an extensive collection of quotes and summaries from depositions related to land boundary disputes that were filed in the late 1790s. These lands were those original grants obtained from Virginia in 1780. The depositions provide evidence of who was in Jefferson/Nelson/Shelby Counties during those very early years.

I finally took a look at Cox Family in America by Henry M. Cox. It was published in 1912. Many of the authorities consulted for this compilation were family histories written by other individuals. None of the information is directly attached to its source which makes it difficult to confirm where the information originated from. The information pertaining to my Cox line is fragmented at best. That said, I don’t believe I can use it as a credible source going forward.


As an aside, I went down a rabbit hole this week as well. I thought I would get a head start on the next surname I will be tackling, even though it will likely be a year before I can start it. Winkler. As I have lamented in the past, in 1880 there was a young woman named Harriet Murray listed as a half-sister in George Winkler’s household. Her mother’s name was Sophia. George’s mother’s name was Sophia, so naturally that is how I connected them. Harriet disappeared after the 1880 census and I have tried to sort through Sophia’s back story. I ended up with a few DNA matches to Sophia. These are likely due to the trees the matches are attached to. They document that Harriet’s mother’s name was Sophia Abel. For now I have disconnected Harriet from my tree and will see if those common ancestor matches remove themselves.

In trying to sort this out, I enlisted the help of ChatGPT just to keep me sane. Granted, I only recently signed up for a free account, so I have no search history saved to me as a user. As it was spewing out findings and supporting information, it kept referencing this blog…the one *I* write. After two queries of getting my own musings back, I finally clued the app in on that very fact. It was very apologetic and assured me it would use the information that I have provided here when considering responses, not just rehash what I have already come up with.

Something occurred to me as I was re-reading the last feedback I received from Chat (I really need to give him a name). George’s marriage record was not accompanied by a parental permission for him. That said, I checked into marriage laws for 1861 in Indiana. Parental permission was not required if the groom was at least 21 years of age. This would support George’s birth in 1840 not 1843. Also, the marriage record lists his last name as “Winkle”. Not sure if that is a concern or not. However, I did manually review all of the 1860 Census for Knox County and there were no Winklers (or Winkles) residing in the county at that time. I have a few more ideas to check on before I essentially give up on finding George’s parents. It’s looking like the Winkler section in my manuscript won’t take long to put together.


Error resolution. The last available update: I have 4929 errors in the tree–376 possible duplicates, 4097 with no documents, 456 other errors.

  • A 3rd cousin, who interestingly is connected on both my maternal and paternal sides, needed sources added.
  • A dangler. Appears she is the sister-in-law of my grandmother’s brother. Since I am not keeping extended family in that regard, she will be deleted.
  • A 6th cousin with no sources attached. She was named in her father’s obituary so that will have to do.

Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,019 people
End of Week: 27,050 people
Change = +31 persons
Tasks for coming week:

  • Continue research on Isaac Cox, “The Immigrant” and his wife Susannah Tomlinson.
  • Review Coxes of Cox Creek
  • Run newspaper search, especially for articles recounting local history
  • Review the Cox package of information from Sweden
  • Review Minutes of Yohogania Co, VA
  • Look for documents in Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Kentucky

  1. Kentucky County Court, Nelson County Probate Records, volume A, pages 43-45, film 9612, images 28-29, FamilySearch.org ↩︎
  2. Evelyn C Adams, “The Coxes of Cox’s Creek, Kentucky”, Genealogies of Kentucky Families, Genealogical Publishing Co, Inc (Baltimore), 1981, page 464. ↩︎
  3. Nelson County Deeds, 1784-1795, pages 146-147, film 9618, images 576-577, FamilySearch.org ↩︎
  4. Adams, page 465. ↩︎
  5. Henry Miller Cox, The Cox Family in America, The Unionist-Gazette Association (New Jersey), 1912, page 253. ↩︎
  6. Nora Lee McGee, Early Records of Nelson County 1775-1800, film 467410, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎

2025 Week 52

28 Sunday Dec 2025

Posted by suzieg1969 in Genealogy, Newspapers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ancestry, Cox, family-history, Genealogy, Kentucky, Missouri, planning, writing

Wow! The last week of the year. I’m actually proud of myself that I kept up with the blog. I only missed three weeks out of the 52, so I’m just a little impressed.

I am finishing up the bio writing for Benjamin and Sarah Piety Cox’s children this week. Having this blog has helped me with organizing facts and sources. While I didn’t do the greatest job of documenting everything on the blog, I left myself enough breadcrumbs to make it worthwhile. For instance, the Find A Grave memorial for Finetta Cox Arnold stated her death was announced in the Liberty (MO) Tribune. Thing is, I don’t ever recall finding it. I had a death notice for one of her daughters in 1882, but not Finetta. So, back to the newspaper archive. After a little searching I found what I was looking for. YAY!

Liberty Tribune, Liberty, Missouri, November 15, 1872, page 2.

Having finished writing up the biographies of Benjamin and Sarah’s family, I am now moving on to Benjamin’s parents–Isaac Cox and Susannah Tomlinson. This will prove to be challenging for several reasons. The first being that there were several Isaac Coxes who lived in the Colonies during this time, and there are researchers out there who have haphazardly intermixed details of the various men. Even within this family unit, Isaac “the Immigrant” is regularly confused with his son Colonel Isaac. My first task is to sort out the various Isaac’s while gathering documentation for my two Isaacs. On FamilySearch alone, a full text search of documents from the 1700s returned a list of almost 3000 documents. While I don’t anticipate needing to read all 3000 documents, I believe I can cull enough information from these documents to sort these gentlemen out. Hopefully other Isaac Cox researchers will find this useful as well.

Will the real Isaac Cox please stand up?

Talbot County, Maryland – There are two Isaac Coxes (father and son) who resided in Talbot County, Maryland. The elder Isaac wrote his Last Will and Testament in 1786. His wife was named Mary and he had a married daughter Elizabeth Jenkinson and sons named Isaac and Joseph. His son Isaac was named his executor and it appears the will was entered into probate May 25th, 1788. It was mentioned in the court minutes that this Isaac Cox was a Quaker.1

New York City – This Isaac Cox is previously from Philadelphia, but relocated to New York. He was a merchant with a wife named Catherine. Isaac and Catherine were purchasing a house in New York in 1785.2

Philadelphia/Bucks County, Pennsylvania – Mention of another father and son pair of Isaac Coxes surfaced in Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1779. The older Isaac who is deceased, was a merchant in Philadelphia. The son’s occupation was not mentioned.3 The elder Isaac seems to have had dealings in Lancaster County and Berks County as well.

Charleston, South Carolina – Mention of an Isaac Cox from Philadelphia was made in a land transaction in Charleston, South Carolina in 1765. This very well could be the same Isaac who was mentioned as deceased in 1779.4

Culpepper County, Virginia – An Isaac Cox and his wife Lydia involved in a land transaction in New Jersey in 1792.5

Kent County, Delaware – An Isaac Cox and his wife Sarah from Philadelphia are named in a deed in Kent County, Delaware in 1796. Isaac, whose occupation is Hatter, is named as a the son of a Susannah Hunn Cox in the indenture.6 An earlier deed from 1772 names Susannah with her husband Isaac in this same county. Also mentioned is a Powell Cox who might be related.7

Nashville, Davidson County, North Carolina (now Tennessee) – An Isaac Cox from Philadelphia are party to a land transaction in 1792.8 It is highly possible that this Isaac Cox is one and the same with a previously mentioned merchant from Philadelphia.

Guilford County, North Carolina – An Isaac and a William Cox of Guilford County, sold land to a John Cox in 1771.9

New Providence, Bahamas – The Last Will and Testament of a Jacob Cox names several family members including a sister Elizabeth Marshall and a brother Isaac Cox who resides in Philadelphia. Jacob’s will was written in 1764 and names several of Isaac’s children including Martha, Altha, John, Isaac, and Mary.10

I’ll stop there, but may add to the list as I come across other Isaacs. Some of these may very well be connected to my tree. There are others with the surname of Cox who have married into my tree at various points that are not directly descended from Isaac Cox who settled in Nelson County, Kentucky. Also, I will need to use a broader set of search criteria considering where my Cox family is known to have resided through the years. Hampshire County, Virginia later became part of West Virginia. I will want to pull those documents as well as ones that might be in Virginia. I will want to examine documents from Maryland, based on previous writings about the family, but I will want to be careful of the timeline so as to not confuse my Coxes with others in the area.

What I also find fascinating is that my Cox family and my presumed DeMoss family were in the same area of Virginia at approximately the same time. Both purportedly had interactions with George Washington in his early days as a surveyor. I have to wonder if I will stumble across any documents naming both families together. Only time and research will tell.


Error resolution. The last available update: I have 4926 errors in the tree–376 possible duplicates, 4094 with no documents, 456 other errors.

  • Distant cousin needs sources. I was able to add sources to him and his siblings.
  • The wife of a distant cousin needs a last name and sources. I was able to update a few other family members, but not the cousin or the wife.
  • Another distant cousin from long ago who needs sources. I was able to supple a couple and add a few family members.

This week in the past…
I’d like to take an opportunity to celebrate the anniversaries of births, marriages, and deaths of my bloodlines from the week ahead.
361 years ago – marriage of Susanna Whitehead (10th ggm) and Nathaniel Bunnell Sr (10th ggf)
272 years ago – birth of James Shields (6th ggf)
245 years ago – birth of Thomas Butler (5th ggf)
233 years ago – death of Joanna Miller (8th ggm)
189 years ago – marriage of Mary Caywood (3rd ggm) and her 1st husband Ambrose Azbell
116 years ago – death of George Winkler (3rd ggf)


Goals and progress…
Beginning of Week: 27,011 people
End of Week: 27,019 people
Change = +8 persons
Tasks for coming week:

  • Begin research on Isaac Cox, “The Immigrant” and his wife Susannah Tomlinson.
  • Review Coxes of Cox Creek
  • Run newspaper search, especially for articles recounting local history
  • Review Cox Family in America
  • Review the Cox package of information from Sweden
  • Review Minutes of Yohogania Co, VA
  • Look for documents in Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Kentucky

  1. Maryland, Orphan’s Court, Talbot County, will book 4, pages 52-53, film 14454, image 542, FamilySearch.org ↩︎
  2. New York Land Records, 1630-1975, volume 42, pages 426-427, film 888346, image 244, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  3. Deeds, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, volume 19, pages 34-35, film 172881, image 37, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  4. South Carolina, Land Records, Charleston, 1764-1765, volume 3D, page 717, film 23526, image 469, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  5. Deeds, Gloucester County, New Jersey, volume C, pages 471-472, film 846546, image 652, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  6. Deed Records of Kent County, Delaware, volume F2, page 154, film 6461, image 468, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  7. Deed Records of Kent County, Delaware, volume V1, page 43, film 6457, image 50, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  8. Land Records, Davidson County, Tennessee, volume C, pages 255-256, film 332658 image 471, FamilySearch.org ↩︎
  9. Deeds, Guilford County, North Carolina, volume 1, page 99, film 19045, image 106, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎
  10. Bahamas, Wills, 1756-1766, page 175-180, film 223469, images 347-350, FamilySearch.org. ↩︎

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