People of Action - 1969
- Index
- Moss Arnold
- Rickey Barlow
- Dewey Britt
- W. K. Brooks
- Tom Burton
- Michael (Mike) Chandler
- Charles Maxwell Collett
- Janice Collett
- Martha Marie Cox
- Shelia Doyle
- Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Duck
- James L. England
- Jimmy Gibson
- Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Goff
- Larry Wayne Gurley
- Eugenia Hawkins
- Isaac Frank Hayes
- Edward L. Hearington
- Obie Hendrix
- Mary Della Herndon
- Melvin Holland
- Ralph Holland
- Kenny Kimbro Houston
- Nola Ivey
- Mr. and Mrs. Allye Jennings
- Tom Jennings
- Grady Jones
- O. C. Jordan II
- O. C. (Sonny) Jordan III
- Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Lankford
- Wiley Ledbetter
- Robert Livingston
- Carrie Long
- Juanita Long
- Joe Marshall
- Connie V. Maxwell
- Arbin McKnight
- Paul Middleton
- James Neely
- Carl W. Partin
- Herbert Powers
- Charlie W. Pratt
- Weldon Pratt
- Joe Quinn
- Allye Ragsdale
- Jimmy Raney
- Biddie Rogers
- Will Rogers
- Jim Rushing
- Edna Samples
- Henry Lewis Sanders
- Sue Smith
- Leonard E. Sperry
- Lee Stanfill
- Allie Mae Stevens
- Rubylyn Tanner
- Townsend Family
- Mr. and Mrs. Jess Tucker
- Vada Warden
- Frank Welch
- Joseph L. Wheat
- J. D. Wilford
- W. Terry Wilford
From Lillye Younger, People of Action (Brewer Printing Company, Jackson, Tennessee, n.d.). Special thanks to Constance Collett and the estate of the late Lillye Younger for permission to make this web page.
Martha Marie Cox
By Mrs. Lillye Younger
Oldest Decatur Resident Still Hard-Working At 102
PARSONS, Tenn.—Mrs. Martha Maria Cox, 102, the oldest resident in Decatur County, attributes her long life and good health to hard work and regular schedule.
Mrs. Cox makes her summer home with her daughter, Mrs. George Bell of Parsons, and her son, Ezra Cox, in Benton County. She spends her winters with her other two children, Mrs. Paul Tippett and Otis Cox of Huntingdon.
She enjoys telling her great-grandchildren of their family's history. "My father, John Wilson, was an adventurer. He left his home in Belfast, Ireland, and came to America to settle in Philadelphia."
"He left his sweetheart, Jane Hunter, behind; however, they corresponded regularly. Seven years later he had saved enough money to send for her and they were married shortly after her arrival.
"My parents met Tennesseans and were so impressed with the state they moved to a farm near Sugar Tree in 1857. I was born on this farm. I am the last of my. parents four children."
She married William H. Cox at the age of 19 and lived on a farm near Sugar Tree. "The first year was very hard. We were not able to buy a cook-stove so I cooked over an open fire. We used oxen to plow our fields and raised our food.
"Sheep were raised and sheared for clothing. I have never had a ready-made dress. Once a year, our geese were picked to make feather beds; and grease and lye were used to make our soap; our wheat was carried to the mill to make flour."
"My husband and I built our house, and all I have ever known is hard work," concludes Mrs. Cox. Her husband died in 1943.
Mrs. Cox still rises at 5 a.m. and does daily chores. Although she has always had excellent health, she was the first contributor to the Decatur County Hospital building fund.
Never believing in women voting, she did vote at the age of 97 for her granddaughter, Mrs. Juanita Long, who ran for county judge of Decatur County in 1960. She is a member of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church at Spence Chapel.
Mrs. Cox has 14 grandchildren, 31 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild. On her 100th birthday her children honored her with an open house.
During this celebration, she received congratulatory telegrams from her President, the late John F. Kennedy and her governor, Frank Clement.