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Information: The first column shows data points from Cox, Jacob Dolson, 1828-1900 in red. The third column shows data points from Cox, Jacob Potson in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
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Cox, Jacob Dolson, 1828-1900
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Cox, Jacob Potson
Cox, Jacob Dolson, 1828-1900
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Cox
Forename :
Jacob Dolson
Date :
1828-1900
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- Cox, Jacob Dolson, 1828-1900
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- Cox, Jacob Dolson, 1828-1900
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Jacob Dolson Cox was born in Montreal (then located in the British colonial Province of Lower Canada) on October 27, 1828. His father and mother respectively were Jacob Dolson Cox and Thedia Redelia (Kenyon) Cox, both Americans and residents of New York. His father Jacob was of Dutch origin, descended from Hanoverian emigrant Michael Cox (Koch) who arrived in New York in 1702. His mother Thedia was descended from Revolutionary War Connecticut soldier Payne Kenyon who was there when British General John Burgoyne surrendered at Saratoga in 1777. Thedia also was descended from Revolutionary War Connecticut soldier Freeman Allyn, who fought against Benedict Arnold at Groton. The Allyns were the early settlers of Salem and Manchester, Massachusetts. Thedia was additionally descended from the Elder William Brewster who emigrated to the Plymouth Colony on the Mayflower in 1620.
The elder Jacob was a New York building contractor and superintended the roof construction of the Church of Notre Dame in Montreal. Cox returned with his parents to New York City a year later. His early education included private readings with a Columbia College student. His family suffered a financial setback during the Panic of 1837, and Cox was unable to afford a college education and obtain a law degree. New York State law mandated that an alternative to college would be to work as an apprentice in the legal firm for seven years before entering the bar. In 1842, Cox entered into an apprenticeship for a legal firm and worked for two years. Having changed his mind on becoming a lawyer, Cox worked as a bookkeeper in a brokerage firm and studied mathematics and classical languages in his off hours. In 1846 he enrolled at Oberlin College in the preparatory school having been influenced by the Reverends Samuel D. Cochran and Charles Grandison Finney, leaders of Oberlin College to study theology and become a minister. Oberlin College was a progressive educational facility that was coeducational and admitted students of different races. He graduated from Oberlin with a degree in theology in 1850 or 1851. After a disagreement with his father-in-law over theology, Cox left his ministerial studies and became superintendent of the Warren, Ohio, school system. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1853.
While attending Oberlin, Cox married the eldest daughter of college president Finney in 1849; at age 19, Helen Clarissa Finney was already a widow with a small son. The couple lived with the president, but Cox and his father-in-law became estranged due to theological disputes. Cox was the father of the painter Kenyon Cox; his grandson, Allyn Cox, was a noted muralist.
Cox was a Whig and had voted for Winfield Scott in 1852, having strong family abolitionist ties. As the Whig party dissolved, in 1855 Cox helped to organize the Republican Party in Ohio and stumped for its candidates in counties surrounding Warren. Cox was elected to the Ohio State Senate in 1859 and formed a political alliance with Senator and future President James A. Garfield, and with Governor Salmon P. Chase. While in the legislature, he accepted a commission with the Ohio Militia as a brigadier general and spent much of the winter of 1860–61 studying military science.
At the start of the war, Cox was the father of six children (of the eight he and Helen eventually had), but he chose to enter Federal service as an Ohio volunteer. Cox had remained a member of the Ohio state Senate when the Civil War broke out at the Battle of Fort Sumter. Cox joined the Union Army to fulfill Ohio's Union quota of troops. On April 3, 1861, Cox was appointed Brigadier General of Ohio Volunteers by Ohio Governor William Dennision.
His first assignment was to command a recruiting camp near Columbus, and then the Kanawha Brigade of the Department of the Ohio. His brigade joined the Department of Western Virginia and fought successfully in the early Kanawha Valley campaign under Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan. In 1862 the brigade moved to Washington, D.C., and was attached to John Pope's Army of Virginia, but was delayed by McClellan and so did not see action at the Second Battle of Bull Run with the rest of the army. At the beginning of the Maryland Campaign, Cox's brigade became the Kanawha Division of the IX Corps of the Army of the Potomac. In the Maryland campaign, Cox's men took the important city of Frederick, Maryland, and Cox led the assault on the Confederates on September 14, 1862, at the Battle of South Mountain. When corps commander Maj. Gen. Jesse L. Reno was killed at South Mountain, Cox assumed command of the IX Corps. He suggested to Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside, formally the commander of IX Corps, but who was commanding a two-corps "wing" of the Army, that he be allowed to return to division command, which was more in keeping with his level of military experience. Burnside refused the suggestion but kept Cox under his supervision at the Battle of Antietam. Burnside allowed Cox to execute all orders from McClellan at the battle, while he remained behind the lines. Cox's advancing IX Corps came within minutes of overwhelming the Confederate right wing at Antietam, when they were hit by A.P. Hill's division, which forced Cox to withdraw closer to Union lines.
After Antietam, Cox was appointed major general to rank from October 6, 1862, but this appointment expired the following March when the United States Senate felt that there were too many generals of this rank already serving. He was later renominated and confirmed on December 7, 1864. Most of 1863 was quiet for Cox, who was assigned to command the District of Ohio, and later the District of Michigan, in the Department of Ohio.
During the Atlanta, Franklin-Nashville, and Carolinas campaigns of 1864–65, Cox commanded the 3rd Division of the XXIII Corps of the Army of the Ohio, under Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield. His 3rd Division provided the main effort in the assault at the Battle of Utoy Creek, August 6, 1864. Cox's men broke the Confederate supply line on the Macon and Western Railroad on August 31, leading Confederate General John Bell Hood to abandon Atlanta. During Hood's Tennessee Campaign, Cox and his troops narrowly escaped being surrounded by Hood at Spring Hill, Tennessee, and he is credited with saving the center of the Union battle line at the Battle of Franklin in November 1864. Cox led the 3rd Division at the Battle of Wilmington in North Carolina, then took command of the District of Beaufort and a Provisional Corps, which he led at the Battle of Wyse Fork, before it was officially designated the XXIII Corps.
Before mustering out of the Army on January 1, 1866, Cox was elected governor of Ohio in October 1865. He served from 1866 to 1868, but his moderate views on African-American suffrage and his earlier endorsement of President Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policy caused him to decide not to run for reelection. He then moved to Cincinnati to practice law.
Cox was appointed Secretary of the Interior by President Ulysses S. Grant upon his March 4, 1869 Inauguration. Cox served from March 5 to October 31, 1870, a total of 575 days in office. Cox was an effective advocate of civil service reform and introduced a merit system and testing for appointees. His nomination was accepted by reformers and he was immediately confirmed by the Senate. Grant initially gave Cox the freedom to run his department as he saw fit "focused on public service as an advocation, not a career." However, after Grant failed to back him up against Republican politicians who thrived on the patronage system then rampant in the Interior Department, Cox resigned. As Secretary of Interior Cox was considered an independent thinker. This countered Grant's instincts as a military general believing Cox was acting insubordinate to his presidency. Grant's own view on Cox's resignation, possibly unfairly, was that, "The trouble was that General Cox thought the Interior Department was the whole government, and that Cox was the Interior Department."
After the Mexican–American War the United States acquired more territories and the Interior Department expanded enormously. Cox's responsibilities varied widely, and he administered the Patent, Land, Pensions, and Indian Affairs Offices, the Census, marshalls, and officials of federal court, and was in charge of transcontinental railroads. The growth of the Interior Department had also expanded a spoils system of patronage that many reformers believed was corrupt. The distribution of federal jobs by Congressional legislators was considered vital for their reelection to Congress. Grant required that all applicants to federal jobs apply directly to the Department heads, rather than the President. This gave Cox the authority and opportunity to reform the Interior Department's personnel system.
Secretary Cox was an enthusiastic advocate of civil service reform and upon assuming office he was the first federal department head to implement a civil service merit system in a federal department. Cox's reforms were to limit the spoils system and check the expansion of the federal government's power and influence. Cox fired a third of the clerks unqualified to hold office, and he instituted examinations in the Patent and Census Offices for most applicants, while he requested clerks working in the Patent Office to take the examinations to prove they were worthy to hold office. Many clerks resigned on their own rather than take the examinations. Cox even declined to give his brother a job in the Interior, saying he did not want to be charged with nepotism. Cox's moralistic approach to civil service reform would eventually clash with President Grant's practical use of patronage appointment powers.
By mid-May 1870, Cox's reforms clashed with the patronage driven political system and its leaders. Congressional Republican committee leaders demanded that Cox give departmental employees the "opportunity" to give political assessments. Cox responded that "no subscriptions to political funds or show of political zeal will secure their retention." Cox made contributions voluntary, but the ability to pass civil service examinations would remain mandatory, to keep their jgobs. Cox said that mandatory assessments would be distressful to the employees families financially.
The breaking point came between Cox and Congressional patronage powers, when Cox implemented a 30 day paid leave policy on federal employees at the Interior Department, in part used for the fall campaign. Workers would not be paid for extra days off after the 30-day limit. Prior to electric air conditioning, the hot Summer of 1870 caused employees to use up most of their 30 day vacation time, leaving only a few days of paid campaigning. Many clerks complained to party leaders Senator Zachariah Chandler and Senator Simon Cameron, saying they could not campaign, putting the blame on Cox's 30 vacation policy. Cameron was reported to have said, "Damn Secretary Cox ! We'll see the President about this fool business." The pressure from party leaders worked, and on October 3, 1870, Grant overturned Cox's 30 day vacation rule.
Even before Grant became president, an annexationist faction in American politics desired control over the Caribbean islands. William H. Seward, Secretary of State under Lincoln and Johnson, having purchased Alaska from the Russians and attempted to buy the Danish West Indies from the Danes, began negotiations to purchase the Dominican Republic, then referred to as Santo Domingo. These negotiations continued under Grant, led by Orville E. Babcock, a confidant who had served on Grant's staff during the Civil War. Grant was initially skeptical, but at the urging of Admiral Porter, who wanted a naval base at Samaná Bay, and Joseph W. Fabens, a New England businessman employed by the Dominican government, Grant examined the matter and became convinced of its wisdom. Grant believed in peaceful expansion of the nation's borders and thought the majority-black island would allow new economic opportunities for freedmen. The acquisition, according to Grant, would ease race relations in the South, clear slavery from Brazil and Cuba, and increase American naval power in the Caribbean.
Grant sent Babcock to consult with Buenaventura Báez, the pro-annexation Dominican president, to see if the proposal was practical; Babcock returned with a draft treaty of annexation in December 1869. Secretary of State Hamilton Fish told Cox in a private meeting that Babcock had no authorization to make such a treaty. Going against his normal protocol of listening to each Cabinet member, Grant revealed Babcock's unauthorized treaty to his cabinet without discussion. Grant casually told his Cabinet he knew Babcock had no authority to make the treaty but he could remedy this by having the treaty authorized by the United States Dominican Republic Consul. All of the Cabinet kept quiet until Secretary Cox spoke up and asked Grant, "But Mr. President, has it been settled, then, that we want to annex Santo Domingo?" Grant blushed and was embarrassed by Cox's direct questioning. Grant then turned to his left looking at Secretary Fish and then turned to his right looking at Secretary of Treasury George S. Boutwell, puffing hard on his cigar. The uncomfortable silence continued until President Grant ordered another item of business. The assembled Cabinet never again spoke on Santo Domingo. Grant personally lobbied Senators to pass the treaty, going so far as to visit Charles Sumner at his home. Fish out of loyalty to Grant authorized and submitted the treaty. The Senate, led by the opposition of Sumner, refused to pass the treaty.
After the Piegan Indian massacre in January 1870, Secretary Cox in March 1870 demanded that Congress implement definitive and lasting legislation on Indian Policy. President Grant, who desired that Indians become "civilized," had created the Board of Indian Commissioners in 1869 under his Peace policy. Cox defended the integrity of the Commissioners appointed by President Grant. The massacre indirectly helped keep the Bureau of Indian Affairs under the Department of Interior, rather than be transferred to the Department of War. Cox believed that industrial progress such as railroads and telegraph lines were no excuse to break treaties with the Indians. Cox believed that Native Americans derived no benefits from frontier towns that took away pasture lands from the buffalo herds, an Indian food staple. Cox believed that keeping promises to the Indians, rather than breaking treaties, was essential for peace. Cox, however, viewed Indians had low intelligence, were conceited, and made poor diplomats. In 1871, after Cox had resigned from office, Congress and President Grant created a comprehensive law that ended the Indian treaty system; the law treated individual Native Americans as wards of the federal government, rather than dealing with the tribes as sovereign entities.
In early 1870, Sioux Indians in Wyoming, under the leadership of Chief Red Cloud and Chief Spotted Tail, were upset as white settlers encroached on Indian land. To avoid war, Red Cloud asked to see President Grant, who along with Spotted Tail, were allowed to journey East to Washington. Cox looked forward to their visit, hoping to convince the Sioux chiefs of the federal government's commitment to Indian treaties, and also to impress them with the power and grandeur of the nation, so they would be fearful of making war. Arriving in Washington, the chiefs had conversations with Cox, Ely Parker, and President Grant. On June 1, the chiefs were given a tour of Washington, but failed to be awed into submission. On June 2, Cox was scolded by Spotted Tail for not keeping the Treaty of 1868. In response, Cox lectured Spotted Tail that complaining was not manly, and that the Grant administration's Indian policies had positive results. Spotted Tail jested to Cox, that Cox would have slit his throat if he had to live through the troubles Spotted Tail was forced to endure. On June 3, Red Cloud took a similar tact as Spotted Tail, emphasizing he would not give up the old ways. Red Cloud asked Cox for food and ammunition so his people could hunt and not starve, railed against broken treaties, and forcing Indians into starvation. Cox put the chiefs off and told them they would speak with President Grant.
On June 7, Cox attempted to placate the Indian chiefs that President Grant, the "Great White Father", acted not out of fear, but had the desire to do the right thing. Cox told the Indians they would get all they asked for, except for guns, and Cox personally promised to see the treaties were kept to the letter. Meeting the Indians, President Grant was warm and welcome and emphasized the same sentiments as Cox. Grant gave the chiefs a formal State Dinner at the White House, that proved to emphasize a clash of two cultures. The chiefs were given fine foods and wine but were especially fond of strawberry ice cream. Spotted Tail was reported to have commented that his white hosts ate far better foods than the rations sent to the Indians. At their final meeting, Cox offered several more concessions, and allowed the Indians to give names of agents they would prefer to act as interlocutors with the government. Cox also promised to give the chiefs seventeen horses. Red Cloud apologized to Cox for his rudeness, while Cox promised to promote Indian interest. Before returning to Wyoming the Indians visited New York City, and the philanthropist eastern papers demanded a more generous Sioux policy. Cox sent the Indians the promised seventeen horses and arranged for a group of reformers to accompany the promised goods. The arrival of the aid package did much to calm the situation and war was averted. One historian noted that the Washington visit was a success, while Red Cloud adopted a policy of diplomacy rather than war.
In August 1870, Secretary Cox came into conflict with President Grant over the fraudulent McGarrahan claims. Grant wanted the McGarrahan claims either settled by Congress or if Congress failed to do so then his administration. Although Grant believed there was fraud in the matter he wanted the McGarrahan claims settled. Cox, however, in a letter to the President, told Grant that he wanted nothing to do with the McGarrahan claims, believing that McGarrahan was entirely fraudulent in asking for a patent on land claims in California. Cox stated that one of McGarrahan's attorneys was instructed to bribe Cox $20,000 for him to approve that patent. McGarrahan had applied for a patent on California agriculture land to be bought up at a low price. However, the land was actually used for gold mining purposes. Cox appealed to Grant not to have Cox appear before a District Court in regards to the McGarrahan claims and to hold a Cabinet meeting over the matter. Cox believed that the District Court had no jurisdiction over that matter and that the Department of Interior had sole jurisdiction. When Grant gave no support to Cox over not appearing before the court, Cox saw this as an additional reason for continuing in office—though civil service reform was the proximate cause of his resignation.
Dissatisfaction over the Grant administration, his appointments of family and friends, corruption at the New York Customs House, and his attempt to annex Santo Domingo, led many reformers to seek new leadership. Grant's prosecution of the Ku Klux Klan alienated former Republican allies, who believed civil service reform should have priority over civil rights of blacks. In 1870, Senator Carl Schurz of Missouri, a German immigrant, bolted from the regular Republican Party. After Cox resigned office the same year, many reformers believed that Grant was incapable of reforming civil service. Grant, however, had yet not given up on civil service reform and he created the Civil Service Commission, authorized and funded by Congress, whose rules would be effective January 1, 1872. Grant appointed reformer and Harper's Weekly editor George William Curtis to head the commission. Grant appointment Columbus Delano, Grant's third cousin and replacement of Cox, however, exempted the Interior Department from the Commission's rules, later saying the Department was too large for compliance.
In March 1871, a disgruntled Cox organized a breakaway nucleus of reforming Republicans in Cincinnati, when 100 Republicans signed a pact, separating themselves from the regular Republican Party, calling themselves Liberal Republicans.[40] Schurz, now considered a Liberal Republican ringleader, advocated full amnesty for former Confederates. The new party demanded "civil service reform, sound money, low tariffs, and state's rights." Meeting on May 1, 1872 at their convention held in Cincinnati, the Liberal Republicans nominated New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley for President of the United States. Cox had been mentioned for the presidency, but he was not put on the ballot. Reformers had favored Charles Francis Adams for president and he was put on the ballot, but he could not obtain enough votes to capture the nomination. Cox was against Greeley's nomination and withdrew his support for the Liberal Republican Revolt. Greeley, in effect, took the campaign from reformers, attacking Grant's Reconstruction policy, rather than making reform the primary goal. Grant, who was renominated by the regular Republican Party, easily won reelection over Greeley having captured 56% of the popular vote.
Cox was considered as a U.S. Senate candidate in the 1872 election, but the Ohio legislature selected a less conservative candidate. At this time U.S. Senators were chosen by state legislatures rather than by popular vote.
In October 1873, Cox was made President and Receiver of the Toledo and Wabash Railroad. Cox moved to Toledo, Ohio, to take charge of the property. He served from 1873 to 1878.
Republican Party candidate Cox was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Toledo in 1876. Cox served a single term in the Forty-Fifth Congress from 1877 to 1879. Cox defeated Democratic Party candidate Frank H. Hurd. Cox received 17,276 votes against Hurd who received 15,361 votes. Cox represented the Sixth District of Ohio that included Fulton, Henry, Lucas, Ottawa, Williams, and Wood counties. Cox declined to run for a second term.
He then returned to Cincinnati, serving as Dean of the Cincinnati Law School from 1881 to 1897. After retiring from his position as dean, he was urged by President William McKinley to accept the position of U.S. ambassador to Spain, but declined, having strong anti-imperialist views.
Cox was President of the University of Cincinnati from 1885 to 1889.
During his later years, Cox was a prolific author. His works include Atlanta (published in 1882); The March to the Sea: Franklin and Nashville (1882); The Second Battle of Bull Run (1882); The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee (1897); and Military Reminiscences of the Civil War (1900). His books are still today cited by scholars as objective histories and, in the case of his memoirs, incisive analyses of military practice and events.
Cox died on summer vacation at Gloucester, Massachusetts. He is buried in Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati.
With the exception of dissertations and a few biographical articles, there were no 20th-century book biographies of Cox's entire life. In 1901, historian William Cox Cochran authored a 35-page book titled General Jacob Dolson Cox: Early Life and Military Services published by Bibliotheca Sacra Company in Oberlin, Ohio. The Biographical Dictionary of America published in 1906 by the American Biographical Society, edited by Rossiter Johnson, had a biographical article on Cox, that included a sketch portrait of Cox. Volume 4 of Dictionary of American Biography, edited by Dumas Malone, published in 1930 by Charles Scribner's Sons, has a biographical article on Cox, authored by Homer Carey Hockett (H.C.H.). In 2014, historian Eugene D. Schmiel authored Citizen-General: Jacob Dolson Cox and the Civil War Era book biography on Cox's entire life.
According to historian Donald K. Pickens, Cox "was a fascinating figure, very much part of his time, yet his various interests and achievements set him apart from his contemporaries." Pickens said Cox was an effective Secretary of Interior, "following Grant's policy of eventual assimilation of American Indians." Cox's endorsement of civil service reform was in opposition to powerful Republican Senators. Historian Ron Chernow said Cox was a conservative on Grant's cabinet, preaching against black suffrage and favored racial segregation, but "he enjoyed a reputation of an efficient administrator and an energetic ally of civil service reform." Historian Eugene D. Schmiel said Cox, as Grant's Secretary of Interior, "implemented one of the most far-reaching attempts to reform Indian Policy and instituted the federal government's first extensive civil service reform." Schmiel said "knowledge of Cox the citizen-general is limited, and he remains a relative unknown except to specialists and buffs." Concerning Cox's published military works, historian H.C.H. said that Cox, in general, was "recognized as an elegant and forceful writer, of fine critical ability and impartial judgement, one of the foremost military historians of the country."
Built in 1880, Cox's home in Cincinnati is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Cox Administration Building (designed by Cass Gilbert) at Oberlin College is named in his honor.
Around 1873, Cox became interested the study of microscopy and took it up as a recreational hobby. Cox's first studies were on fresh water forms, including rotatoria and diatomaceae. Cox displayed painstaking thoroughness and logical analysis in his microscopical studies, keeping notes of his work and observations. In 1874, Cox took up the study of photo-micrography, and in 1875 he began making a series of photo-micrographs of diatomaceae, that totaled several hundred in number. In 1881, Cox was elected fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society. Cox gave up microscopical study in 1895, believing it damaged his eyes, but his interest in microscopy remained life long.
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- BiogHist
<p>Jacob Dolson Cox was born in Montreal (then located in the British colonial Province of Lower Canada) on October 27, 1828. His father and mother respectively were Jacob Dolson Cox and Thedia Redelia (Kenyon) Cox, both Americans and residents of New York. His father Jacob was of Dutch origin, descended from Hanoverian emigrant Michael Cox (Koch) who arrived in New York in 1702. His mother Thedia was descended from Revolutionary War Connecticut soldier Payne Kenyon who was there when British General John Burgoyne surrendered at Saratoga in 1777. Thedia also was descended from Revolutionary War Connecticut soldier Freeman Allyn, who fought against Benedict Arnold at Groton. The Allyns were the early settlers of Salem and Manchester, Massachusetts. Thedia was additionally descended from the Elder William Brewster who emigrated to the Plymouth Colony on the Mayflower in 1620.</p>
<p>The elder Jacob was a New York building contractor and superintended the roof construction of the Church of Notre Dame in Montreal. Cox returned with his parents to New York City a year later. His early education included private readings with a Columbia College student. His family suffered a financial setback during the Panic of 1837, and Cox was unable to afford a college education and obtain a law degree. New York State law mandated that an alternative to college would be to work as an apprentice in the legal firm for seven years before entering the bar. In 1842, Cox entered into an apprenticeship for a legal firm and worked for two years. Having changed his mind on becoming a lawyer, Cox worked as a bookkeeper in a brokerage firm and studied mathematics and classical languages in his off hours. In 1846 he enrolled at Oberlin College in the preparatory school having been influenced by the Reverends Samuel D. Cochran and Charles Grandison Finney, leaders of Oberlin College to study theology and become a minister. Oberlin College was a progressive educational facility that was coeducational and admitted students of different races. He graduated from Oberlin with a degree in theology in 1850 or 1851. After a disagreement with his father-in-law over theology, Cox left his ministerial studies and became superintendent of the Warren, Ohio, school system. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1853.</p>
<p>While attending Oberlin, Cox married the eldest daughter of college president Finney in 1849; at age 19, Helen Clarissa Finney was already a widow with a small son. The couple lived with the president, but Cox and his father-in-law became estranged due to theological disputes. Cox was the father of the painter Kenyon Cox; his grandson, Allyn Cox, was a noted muralist.</p>
<p>Cox was a Whig and had voted for Winfield Scott in 1852, having strong family abolitionist ties. As the Whig party dissolved, in 1855 Cox helped to organize the Republican Party in Ohio and stumped for its candidates in counties surrounding Warren. Cox was elected to the Ohio State Senate in 1859 and formed a political alliance with Senator and future President James A. Garfield, and with Governor Salmon P. Chase. While in the legislature, he accepted a commission with the Ohio Militia as a brigadier general and spent much of the winter of 1860–61 studying military science.</p>
<p>At the start of the war, Cox was the father of six children (of the eight he and Helen eventually had), but he chose to enter Federal service as an Ohio volunteer. Cox had remained a member of the Ohio state Senate when the Civil War broke out at the Battle of Fort Sumter. Cox joined the Union Army to fulfill Ohio's Union quota of troops. On April 3, 1861, Cox was appointed Brigadier General of Ohio Volunteers by Ohio Governor William Dennision.</p>
<p>His first assignment was to command a recruiting camp near Columbus, and then the Kanawha Brigade of the Department of the Ohio. His brigade joined the Department of Western Virginia and fought successfully in the early Kanawha Valley campaign under Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan. In 1862 the brigade moved to Washington, D.C., and was attached to John Pope's Army of Virginia, but was delayed by McClellan and so did not see action at the Second Battle of Bull Run with the rest of the army. At the beginning of the Maryland Campaign, Cox's brigade became the Kanawha Division of the IX Corps of the Army of the Potomac. In the Maryland campaign, Cox's men took the important city of Frederick, Maryland, and Cox led the assault on the Confederates on September 14, 1862, at the Battle of South Mountain. When corps commander Maj. Gen. Jesse L. Reno was killed at South Mountain, Cox assumed command of the IX Corps. He suggested to Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside, formally the commander of IX Corps, but who was commanding a two-corps "wing" of the Army, that he be allowed to return to division command, which was more in keeping with his level of military experience. Burnside refused the suggestion but kept Cox under his supervision at the Battle of Antietam. Burnside allowed Cox to execute all orders from McClellan at the battle, while he remained behind the lines. Cox's advancing IX Corps came within minutes of overwhelming the Confederate right wing at Antietam, when they were hit by A.P. Hill's division, which forced Cox to withdraw closer to Union lines.</p>
<p>After Antietam, Cox was appointed major general to rank from October 6, 1862, but this appointment expired the following March when the United States Senate felt that there were too many generals of this rank already serving. He was later renominated and confirmed on December 7, 1864. Most of 1863 was quiet for Cox, who was assigned to command the District of Ohio, and later the District of Michigan, in the Department of Ohio.</p>
<p>During the Atlanta, Franklin-Nashville, and Carolinas campaigns of 1864–65, Cox commanded the 3rd Division of the XXIII Corps of the Army of the Ohio, under Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield. His 3rd Division provided the main effort in the assault at the Battle of Utoy Creek, August 6, 1864. Cox's men broke the Confederate supply line on the Macon and Western Railroad on August 31, leading Confederate General John Bell Hood to abandon Atlanta. During Hood's Tennessee Campaign, Cox and his troops narrowly escaped being surrounded by Hood at Spring Hill, Tennessee, and he is credited with saving the center of the Union battle line at the Battle of Franklin in November 1864. Cox led the 3rd Division at the Battle of Wilmington in North Carolina, then took command of the District of Beaufort and a Provisional Corps, which he led at the Battle of Wyse Fork, before it was officially designated the XXIII Corps.</p>
<p>Before mustering out of the Army on January 1, 1866, Cox was elected governor of Ohio in October 1865. He served from 1866 to 1868, but his moderate views on African-American suffrage and his earlier endorsement of President Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policy caused him to decide not to run for reelection. He then moved to Cincinnati to practice law.</p>
<p>Cox was appointed Secretary of the Interior by President Ulysses S. Grant upon his March 4, 1869 Inauguration. Cox served from March 5 to October 31, 1870, a total of 575 days in office. Cox was an effective advocate of civil service reform and introduced a merit system and testing for appointees. His nomination was accepted by reformers and he was immediately confirmed by the Senate. Grant initially gave Cox the freedom to run his department as he saw fit "focused on public service as an advocation, not a career." However, after Grant failed to back him up against Republican politicians who thrived on the patronage system then rampant in the Interior Department, Cox resigned. As Secretary of Interior Cox was considered an independent thinker. This countered Grant's instincts as a military general believing Cox was acting insubordinate to his presidency. Grant's own view on Cox's resignation, possibly unfairly, was that, "The trouble was that General Cox thought the Interior Department was the whole government, and that Cox was the Interior Department."</p>
<p>After the Mexican–American War the United States acquired more territories and the Interior Department expanded enormously. Cox's responsibilities varied widely, and he administered the Patent, Land, Pensions, and Indian Affairs Offices, the Census, marshalls, and officials of federal court, and was in charge of transcontinental railroads. The growth of the Interior Department had also expanded a spoils system of patronage that many reformers believed was corrupt. The distribution of federal jobs by Congressional legislators was considered vital for their reelection to Congress. Grant required that all applicants to federal jobs apply directly to the Department heads, rather than the President. This gave Cox the authority and opportunity to reform the Interior Department's personnel system.</p>
<p>Secretary Cox was an enthusiastic advocate of civil service reform and upon assuming office he was the first federal department head to implement a civil service merit system in a federal department. Cox's reforms were to limit the spoils system and check the expansion of the federal government's power and influence. Cox fired a third of the clerks unqualified to hold office, and he instituted examinations in the Patent and Census Offices for most applicants, while he requested clerks working in the Patent Office to take the examinations to prove they were worthy to hold office. Many clerks resigned on their own rather than take the examinations. Cox even declined to give his brother a job in the Interior, saying he did not want to be charged with nepotism. Cox's moralistic approach to civil service reform would eventually clash with President Grant's practical use of patronage appointment powers.</p>
<p>By mid-May 1870, Cox's reforms clashed with the patronage driven political system and its leaders. Congressional Republican committee leaders demanded that Cox give departmental employees the "opportunity" to give political assessments. Cox responded that "no subscriptions to political funds or show of political zeal will secure their retention." Cox made contributions voluntary, but the ability to pass civil service examinations would remain mandatory, to keep their jgobs. Cox said that mandatory assessments would be distressful to the employees families financially.</p>
<p>The breaking point came between Cox and Congressional patronage powers, when Cox implemented a 30 day paid leave policy on federal employees at the Interior Department, in part used for the fall campaign. Workers would not be paid for extra days off after the 30-day limit. Prior to electric air conditioning, the hot Summer of 1870 caused employees to use up most of their 30 day vacation time, leaving only a few days of paid campaigning. Many clerks complained to party leaders Senator Zachariah Chandler and Senator Simon Cameron, saying they could not campaign, putting the blame on Cox's 30 vacation policy. Cameron was reported to have said, "Damn Secretary Cox ! We'll see the President about this fool business." The pressure from party leaders worked, and on October 3, 1870, Grant overturned Cox's 30 day vacation rule.</p>
<p>Even before Grant became president, an annexationist faction in American politics desired control over the Caribbean islands. William H. Seward, Secretary of State under Lincoln and Johnson, having purchased Alaska from the Russians and attempted to buy the Danish West Indies from the Danes, began negotiations to purchase the Dominican Republic, then referred to as Santo Domingo. These negotiations continued under Grant, led by Orville E. Babcock, a confidant who had served on Grant's staff during the Civil War. Grant was initially skeptical, but at the urging of Admiral Porter, who wanted a naval base at Samaná Bay, and Joseph W. Fabens, a New England businessman employed by the Dominican government, Grant examined the matter and became convinced of its wisdom. Grant believed in peaceful expansion of the nation's borders and thought the majority-black island would allow new economic opportunities for freedmen. The acquisition, according to Grant, would ease race relations in the South, clear slavery from Brazil and Cuba, and increase American naval power in the Caribbean.</p>
<p>Grant sent Babcock to consult with Buenaventura Báez, the pro-annexation Dominican president, to see if the proposal was practical; Babcock returned with a draft treaty of annexation in December 1869. Secretary of State Hamilton Fish told Cox in a private meeting that Babcock had no authorization to make such a treaty. Going against his normal protocol of listening to each Cabinet member, Grant revealed Babcock's unauthorized treaty to his cabinet without discussion. Grant casually told his Cabinet he knew Babcock had no authority to make the treaty but he could remedy this by having the treaty authorized by the United States Dominican Republic Consul. All of the Cabinet kept quiet until Secretary Cox spoke up and asked Grant, "But Mr. President, has it been settled, then, that we want to annex Santo Domingo?" Grant blushed and was embarrassed by Cox's direct questioning. Grant then turned to his left looking at Secretary Fish and then turned to his right looking at Secretary of Treasury George S. Boutwell, puffing hard on his cigar. The uncomfortable silence continued until President Grant ordered another item of business. The assembled Cabinet never again spoke on Santo Domingo. Grant personally lobbied Senators to pass the treaty, going so far as to visit Charles Sumner at his home. Fish out of loyalty to Grant authorized and submitted the treaty. The Senate, led by the opposition of Sumner, refused to pass the treaty.</p>
<p>After the Piegan Indian massacre in January 1870, Secretary Cox in March 1870 demanded that Congress implement definitive and lasting legislation on Indian Policy. President Grant, who desired that Indians become "civilized," had created the Board of Indian Commissioners in 1869 under his Peace policy. Cox defended the integrity of the Commissioners appointed by President Grant. The massacre indirectly helped keep the Bureau of Indian Affairs under the Department of Interior, rather than be transferred to the Department of War. Cox believed that industrial progress such as railroads and telegraph lines were no excuse to break treaties with the Indians. Cox believed that Native Americans derived no benefits from frontier towns that took away pasture lands from the buffalo herds, an Indian food staple. Cox believed that keeping promises to the Indians, rather than breaking treaties, was essential for peace. Cox, however, viewed Indians had low intelligence, were conceited, and made poor diplomats. In 1871, after Cox had resigned from office, Congress and President Grant created a comprehensive law that ended the Indian treaty system; the law treated individual Native Americans as wards of the federal government, rather than dealing with the tribes as sovereign entities.</p>
<p>In early 1870, Sioux Indians in Wyoming, under the leadership of Chief Red Cloud and Chief Spotted Tail, were upset as white settlers encroached on Indian land. To avoid war, Red Cloud asked to see President Grant, who along with Spotted Tail, were allowed to journey East to Washington. Cox looked forward to their visit, hoping to convince the Sioux chiefs of the federal government's commitment to Indian treaties, and also to impress them with the power and grandeur of the nation, so they would be fearful of making war. Arriving in Washington, the chiefs had conversations with Cox, Ely Parker, and President Grant. On June 1, the chiefs were given a tour of Washington, but failed to be awed into submission. On June 2, Cox was scolded by Spotted Tail for not keeping the Treaty of 1868. In response, Cox lectured Spotted Tail that complaining was not manly, and that the Grant administration's Indian policies had positive results. Spotted Tail jested to Cox, that Cox would have slit his throat if he had to live through the troubles Spotted Tail was forced to endure. On June 3, Red Cloud took a similar tact as Spotted Tail, emphasizing he would not give up the old ways. Red Cloud asked Cox for food and ammunition so his people could hunt and not starve, railed against broken treaties, and forcing Indians into starvation. Cox put the chiefs off and told them they would speak with President Grant.</p>
<p>On June 7, Cox attempted to placate the Indian chiefs that President Grant, the "Great White Father", acted not out of fear, but had the desire to do the right thing. Cox told the Indians they would get all they asked for, except for guns, and Cox personally promised to see the treaties were kept to the letter. Meeting the Indians, President Grant was warm and welcome and emphasized the same sentiments as Cox. Grant gave the chiefs a formal State Dinner at the White House, that proved to emphasize a clash of two cultures. The chiefs were given fine foods and wine but were especially fond of strawberry ice cream. Spotted Tail was reported to have commented that his white hosts ate far better foods than the rations sent to the Indians. At their final meeting, Cox offered several more concessions, and allowed the Indians to give names of agents they would prefer to act as interlocutors with the government. Cox also promised to give the chiefs seventeen horses. Red Cloud apologized to Cox for his rudeness, while Cox promised to promote Indian interest. Before returning to Wyoming the Indians visited New York City, and the philanthropist eastern papers demanded a more generous Sioux policy. Cox sent the Indians the promised seventeen horses and arranged for a group of reformers to accompany the promised goods. The arrival of the aid package did much to calm the situation and war was averted. One historian noted that the Washington visit was a success, while Red Cloud adopted a policy of diplomacy rather than war.</p>
<p>In August 1870, Secretary Cox came into conflict with President Grant over the fraudulent McGarrahan claims. Grant wanted the McGarrahan claims either settled by Congress or if Congress failed to do so then his administration. Although Grant believed there was fraud in the matter he wanted the McGarrahan claims settled. Cox, however, in a letter to the President, told Grant that he wanted nothing to do with the McGarrahan claims, believing that McGarrahan was entirely fraudulent in asking for a patent on land claims in California. Cox stated that one of McGarrahan's attorneys was instructed to bribe Cox $20,000 for him to approve that patent. McGarrahan had applied for a patent on California agriculture land to be bought up at a low price. However, the land was actually used for gold mining purposes. Cox appealed to Grant not to have Cox appear before a District Court in regards to the McGarrahan claims and to hold a Cabinet meeting over the matter. Cox believed that the District Court had no jurisdiction over that matter and that the Department of Interior had sole jurisdiction. When Grant gave no support to Cox over not appearing before the court, Cox saw this as an additional reason for continuing in office—though civil service reform was the proximate cause of his resignation.</p>
<p>Dissatisfaction over the Grant administration, his appointments of family and friends, corruption at the New York Customs House, and his attempt to annex Santo Domingo, led many reformers to seek new leadership. Grant's prosecution of the Ku Klux Klan alienated former Republican allies, who believed civil service reform should have priority over civil rights of blacks. In 1870, Senator Carl Schurz of Missouri, a German immigrant, bolted from the regular Republican Party. After Cox resigned office the same year, many reformers believed that Grant was incapable of reforming civil service. Grant, however, had yet not given up on civil service reform and he created the Civil Service Commission, authorized and funded by Congress, whose rules would be effective January 1, 1872. Grant appointed reformer and Harper's Weekly editor George William Curtis to head the commission. Grant appointment Columbus Delano, Grant's third cousin and replacement of Cox, however, exempted the Interior Department from the Commission's rules, later saying the Department was too large for compliance.</p>
<p>In March 1871, a disgruntled Cox organized a breakaway nucleus of reforming Republicans in Cincinnati, when 100 Republicans signed a pact, separating themselves from the regular Republican Party, calling themselves Liberal Republicans.[40] Schurz, now considered a Liberal Republican ringleader, advocated full amnesty for former Confederates. The new party demanded "civil service reform, sound money, low tariffs, and state's rights." Meeting on May 1, 1872 at their convention held in Cincinnati, the Liberal Republicans nominated New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley for President of the United States. Cox had been mentioned for the presidency, but he was not put on the ballot. Reformers had favored Charles Francis Adams for president and he was put on the ballot, but he could not obtain enough votes to capture the nomination. Cox was against Greeley's nomination and withdrew his support for the Liberal Republican Revolt. Greeley, in effect, took the campaign from reformers, attacking Grant's Reconstruction policy, rather than making reform the primary goal. Grant, who was renominated by the regular Republican Party, easily won reelection over Greeley having captured 56% of the popular vote.</p>
<p>Cox was considered as a U.S. Senate candidate in the 1872 election, but the Ohio legislature selected a less conservative candidate. At this time U.S. Senators were chosen by state legislatures rather than by popular vote.</p>
<p>In October 1873, Cox was made President and Receiver of the Toledo and Wabash Railroad. Cox moved to Toledo, Ohio, to take charge of the property. He served from 1873 to 1878.</p>
<p>Republican Party candidate Cox was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Toledo in 1876. Cox served a single term in the Forty-Fifth Congress from 1877 to 1879. Cox defeated Democratic Party candidate Frank H. Hurd. Cox received 17,276 votes against Hurd who received 15,361 votes. Cox represented the Sixth District of Ohio that included Fulton, Henry, Lucas, Ottawa, Williams, and Wood counties. Cox declined to run for a second term.</p>
<p>He then returned to Cincinnati, serving as Dean of the Cincinnati Law School from 1881 to 1897. After retiring from his position as dean, he was urged by President William McKinley to accept the position of U.S. ambassador to Spain, but declined, having strong anti-imperialist views.</p>
<p>Cox was President of the University of Cincinnati from 1885 to 1889.</p>
<p>During his later years, Cox was a prolific author. His works include Atlanta (published in 1882); The March to the Sea: Franklin and Nashville (1882); The Second Battle of Bull Run (1882); The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee (1897); and Military Reminiscences of the Civil War (1900). His books are still today cited by scholars as objective histories and, in the case of his memoirs, incisive analyses of military practice and events.</p>
<p>Cox died on summer vacation at Gloucester, Massachusetts. He is buried in Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati.</p>
<p>With the exception of dissertations and a few biographical articles, there were no 20th-century book biographies of Cox's entire life. In 1901, historian William Cox Cochran authored a 35-page book titled General Jacob Dolson Cox: Early Life and Military Services published by Bibliotheca Sacra Company in Oberlin, Ohio. The Biographical Dictionary of America published in 1906 by the American Biographical Society, edited by Rossiter Johnson, had a biographical article on Cox, that included a sketch portrait of Cox. Volume 4 of Dictionary of American Biography, edited by Dumas Malone, published in 1930 by Charles Scribner's Sons, has a biographical article on Cox, authored by Homer Carey Hockett (H.C.H.). In 2014, historian Eugene D. Schmiel authored Citizen-General: Jacob Dolson Cox and the Civil War Era book biography on Cox's entire life.</p>
<p>According to historian Donald K. Pickens, Cox "was a fascinating figure, very much part of his time, yet his various interests and achievements set him apart from his contemporaries." Pickens said Cox was an effective Secretary of Interior, "following Grant's policy of eventual assimilation of American Indians." Cox's endorsement of civil service reform was in opposition to powerful Republican Senators. Historian Ron Chernow said Cox was a conservative on Grant's cabinet, preaching against black suffrage and favored racial segregation, but "he enjoyed a reputation of an efficient administrator and an energetic ally of civil service reform." Historian Eugene D. Schmiel said Cox, as Grant's Secretary of Interior, "implemented one of the most far-reaching attempts to reform Indian Policy and instituted the federal government's first extensive civil service reform." Schmiel said "knowledge of Cox the citizen-general is limited, and he remains a relative unknown except to specialists and buffs." Concerning Cox's published military works, historian H.C.H. said that Cox, in general, was "recognized as an elegant and forceful writer, of fine critical ability and impartial judgement, one of the foremost military historians of the country."</p>
<p>Built in 1880, Cox's home in Cincinnati is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Cox Administration Building (designed by Cass Gilbert) at Oberlin College is named in his honor.</p>
<p>Around 1873, Cox became interested the study of microscopy and took it up as a recreational hobby. Cox's first studies were on fresh water forms, including rotatoria and diatomaceae. Cox displayed painstaking thoroughness and logical analysis in his microscopical studies, keeping notes of his work and observations. In 1874, Cox took up the study of photo-micrography, and in 1875 he began making a series of photo-micrographs of diatomaceae, that totaled several hundred in number. In 1881, Cox was elected fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society. Cox gave up microscopical study in 1895, believing it damaged his eyes, but his interest in microscopy remained life long.</p>
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<p>Jacob Dolson Cox was born in Montreal (then located in the British colonial Province of Lower Canada) on October 27, 1828. His father and mother respectively were Jacob Dolson Cox and Thedia Redelia (Kenyon) Cox, both Americans and residents of New York. His father Jacob was of Dutch origin, descended from Hanoverian emigrant Michael Cox (Koch) who arrived in New York in 1702. His mother Thedia was descended from Revolutionary War Connecticut soldier Payne Kenyon who was there when British General John Burgoyne surrendered at Saratoga in 1777. Thedia also was descended from Revolutionary War Connecticut soldier Freeman Allyn, who fought against Benedict Arnold at Groton. The Allyns were the early settlers of Salem and Manchester, Massachusetts. Thedia was additionally descended from the Elder William Brewster who emigrated to the Plymouth Colony on the Mayflower in 1620.</p> <p>The elder Jacob was a New York building contractor and superintended the roof construction of the Church of Notre Dame in Montreal. Cox returned with his parents to New York City a year later. His early education included private readings with a Columbia College student. His family suffered a financial setback during the Panic of 1837, and Cox was unable to afford a college education and obtain a law degree. New York State law mandated that an alternative to college would be to work as an apprentice in the legal firm for seven years before entering the bar. In 1842, Cox entered into an apprenticeship for a legal firm and worked for two years. Having changed his mind on becoming a lawyer, Cox worked as a bookkeeper in a brokerage firm and studied mathematics and classical languages in his off hours. In 1846 he enrolled at Oberlin College in the preparatory school having been influenced by the Reverends Samuel D. Cochran and Charles Grandison Finney, leaders of Oberlin College to study theology and become a minister. Oberlin College was a progressive educational facility that was coeducational and admitted students of different races. He graduated from Oberlin with a degree in theology in 1850 or 1851. After a disagreement with his father-in-law over theology, Cox left his ministerial studies and became superintendent of the Warren, Ohio, school system. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1853.</p> <p>While attending Oberlin, Cox married the eldest daughter of college president Finney in 1849; at age 19, Helen Clarissa Finney was already a widow with a small son. The couple lived with the president, but Cox and his father-in-law became estranged due to theological disputes. Cox was the father of the painter Kenyon Cox; his grandson, Allyn Cox, was a noted muralist.</p> <p>Cox was a Whig and had voted for Winfield Scott in 1852, having strong family abolitionist ties. As the Whig party dissolved, in 1855 Cox helped to organize the Republican Party in Ohio and stumped for its candidates in counties surrounding Warren. Cox was elected to the Ohio State Senate in 1859 and formed a political alliance with Senator and future President James A. Garfield, and with Governor Salmon P. Chase. While in the legislature, he accepted a commission with the Ohio Militia as a brigadier general and spent much of the winter of 1860–61 studying military science.</p> <p>At the start of the war, Cox was the father of six children (of the eight he and Helen eventually had), but he chose to enter Federal service as an Ohio volunteer. Cox had remained a member of the Ohio state Senate when the Civil War broke out at the Battle of Fort Sumter. Cox joined the Union Army to fulfill Ohio's Union quota of troops. On April 3, 1861, Cox was appointed Brigadier General of Ohio Volunteers by Ohio Governor William Dennision.</p> <p>His first assignment was to command a recruiting camp near Columbus, and then the Kanawha Brigade of the Department of the Ohio. His brigade joined the Department of Western Virginia and fought successfully in the early Kanawha Valley campaign under Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan. In 1862 the brigade moved to Washington, D.C., and was attached to John Pope's Army of Virginia, but was delayed by McClellan and so did not see action at the Second Battle of Bull Run with the rest of the army. At the beginning of the Maryland Campaign, Cox's brigade became the Kanawha Division of the IX Corps of the Army of the Potomac. In the Maryland campaign, Cox's men took the important city of Frederick, Maryland, and Cox led the assault on the Confederates on September 14, 1862, at the Battle of South Mountain. When corps commander Maj. Gen. Jesse L. Reno was killed at South Mountain, Cox assumed command of the IX Corps. He suggested to Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside, formally the commander of IX Corps, but who was commanding a two-corps "wing" of the Army, that he be allowed to return to division command, which was more in keeping with his level of military experience. Burnside refused the suggestion but kept Cox under his supervision at the Battle of Antietam. Burnside allowed Cox to execute all orders from McClellan at the battle, while he remained behind the lines. Cox's advancing IX Corps came within minutes of overwhelming the Confederate right wing at Antietam, when they were hit by A.P. Hill's division, which forced Cox to withdraw closer to Union lines.</p> <p>After Antietam, Cox was appointed major general to rank from October 6, 1862, but this appointment expired the following March when the United States Senate felt that there were too many generals of this rank already serving. He was later renominated and confirmed on December 7, 1864. Most of 1863 was quiet for Cox, who was assigned to command the District of Ohio, and later the District of Michigan, in the Department of Ohio.</p> <p>During the Atlanta, Franklin-Nashville, and Carolinas campaigns of 1864–65, Cox commanded the 3rd Division of the XXIII Corps of the Army of the Ohio, under Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield. His 3rd Division provided the main effort in the assault at the Battle of Utoy Creek, August 6, 1864. Cox's men broke the Confederate supply line on the Macon and Western Railroad on August 31, leading Confederate General John Bell Hood to abandon Atlanta. During Hood's Tennessee Campaign, Cox and his troops narrowly escaped being surrounded by Hood at Spring Hill, Tennessee, and he is credited with saving the center of the Union battle line at the Battle of Franklin in November 1864. Cox led the 3rd Division at the Battle of Wilmington in North Carolina, then took command of the District of Beaufort and a Provisional Corps, which he led at the Battle of Wyse Fork, before it was officially designated the XXIII Corps.</p> <p>Before mustering out of the Army on January 1, 1866, Cox was elected governor of Ohio in October 1865. He served from 1866 to 1868, but his moderate views on African-American suffrage and his earlier endorsement of President Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policy caused him to decide not to run for reelection. He then moved to Cincinnati to practice law.</p> <p>Cox was appointed Secretary of the Interior by President Ulysses S. Grant upon his March 4, 1869 Inauguration. Cox served from March 5 to October 31, 1870, a total of 575 days in office. Cox was an effective advocate of civil service reform and introduced a merit system and testing for appointees. His nomination was accepted by reformers and he was immediately confirmed by the Senate. Grant initially gave Cox the freedom to run his department as he saw fit "focused on public service as an advocation, not a career." However, after Grant failed to back him up against Republican politicians who thrived on the patronage system then rampant in the Interior Department, Cox resigned. As Secretary of Interior Cox was considered an independent thinker. This countered Grant's instincts as a military general believing Cox was acting insubordinate to his presidency. Grant's own view on Cox's resignation, possibly unfairly, was that, "The trouble was that General Cox thought the Interior Department was the whole government, and that Cox was the Interior Department."</p> <p>After the Mexican–American War the United States acquired more territories and the Interior Department expanded enormously. Cox's responsibilities varied widely, and he administered the Patent, Land, Pensions, and Indian Affairs Offices, the Census, marshalls, and officials of federal court, and was in charge of transcontinental railroads. The growth of the Interior Department had also expanded a spoils system of patronage that many reformers believed was corrupt. The distribution of federal jobs by Congressional legislators was considered vital for their reelection to Congress. Grant required that all applicants to federal jobs apply directly to the Department heads, rather than the President. This gave Cox the authority and opportunity to reform the Interior Department's personnel system.</p> <p>Secretary Cox was an enthusiastic advocate of civil service reform and upon assuming office he was the first federal department head to implement a civil service merit system in a federal department. Cox's reforms were to limit the spoils system and check the expansion of the federal government's power and influence. Cox fired a third of the clerks unqualified to hold office, and he instituted examinations in the Patent and Census Offices for most applicants, while he requested clerks working in the Patent Office to take the examinations to prove they were worthy to hold office. Many clerks resigned on their own rather than take the examinations. Cox even declined to give his brother a job in the Interior, saying he did not want to be charged with nepotism. Cox's moralistic approach to civil service reform would eventually clash with President Grant's practical use of patronage appointment powers.</p> <p>By mid-May 1870, Cox's reforms clashed with the patronage driven political system and its leaders. Congressional Republican committee leaders demanded that Cox give departmental employees the "opportunity" to give political assessments. Cox responded that "no subscriptions to political funds or show of political zeal will secure their retention." Cox made contributions voluntary, but the ability to pass civil service examinations would remain mandatory, to keep their jgobs. Cox said that mandatory assessments would be distressful to the employees families financially.</p> <p>The breaking point came between Cox and Congressional patronage powers, when Cox implemented a 30 day paid leave policy on federal employees at the Interior Department, in part used for the fall campaign. Workers would not be paid for extra days off after the 30-day limit. Prior to electric air conditioning, the hot Summer of 1870 caused employees to use up most of their 30 day vacation time, leaving only a few days of paid campaigning. Many clerks complained to party leaders Senator Zachariah Chandler and Senator Simon Cameron, saying they could not campaign, putting the blame on Cox's 30 vacation policy. Cameron was reported to have said, "Damn Secretary Cox ! We'll see the President about this fool business." The pressure from party leaders worked, and on October 3, 1870, Grant overturned Cox's 30 day vacation rule.</p> <p>Even before Grant became president, an annexationist faction in American politics desired control over the Caribbean islands. William H. Seward, Secretary of State under Lincoln and Johnson, having purchased Alaska from the Russians and attempted to buy the Danish West Indies from the Danes, began negotiations to purchase the Dominican Republic, then referred to as Santo Domingo. These negotiations continued under Grant, led by Orville E. Babcock, a confidant who had served on Grant's staff during the Civil War. Grant was initially skeptical, but at the urging of Admiral Porter, who wanted a naval base at Samaná Bay, and Joseph W. Fabens, a New England businessman employed by the Dominican government, Grant examined the matter and became convinced of its wisdom. Grant believed in peaceful expansion of the nation's borders and thought the majority-black island would allow new economic opportunities for freedmen. The acquisition, according to Grant, would ease race relations in the South, clear slavery from Brazil and Cuba, and increase American naval power in the Caribbean.</p> <p>Grant sent Babcock to consult with Buenaventura Báez, the pro-annexation Dominican president, to see if the proposal was practical; Babcock returned with a draft treaty of annexation in December 1869. Secretary of State Hamilton Fish told Cox in a private meeting that Babcock had no authorization to make such a treaty. Going against his normal protocol of listening to each Cabinet member, Grant revealed Babcock's unauthorized treaty to his cabinet without discussion. Grant casually told his Cabinet he knew Babcock had no authority to make the treaty but he could remedy this by having the treaty authorized by the United States Dominican Republic Consul. All of the Cabinet kept quiet until Secretary Cox spoke up and asked Grant, "But Mr. President, has it been settled, then, that we want to annex Santo Domingo?" Grant blushed and was embarrassed by Cox's direct questioning. Grant then turned to his left looking at Secretary Fish and then turned to his right looking at Secretary of Treasury George S. Boutwell, puffing hard on his cigar. The uncomfortable silence continued until President Grant ordered another item of business. The assembled Cabinet never again spoke on Santo Domingo. Grant personally lobbied Senators to pass the treaty, going so far as to visit Charles Sumner at his home. Fish out of loyalty to Grant authorized and submitted the treaty. The Senate, led by the opposition of Sumner, refused to pass the treaty.</p> <p>After the Piegan Indian massacre in January 1870, Secretary Cox in March 1870 demanded that Congress implement definitive and lasting legislation on Indian Policy. President Grant, who desired that Indians become "civilized," had created the Board of Indian Commissioners in 1869 under his Peace policy. Cox defended the integrity of the Commissioners appointed by President Grant. The massacre indirectly helped keep the Bureau of Indian Affairs under the Department of Interior, rather than be transferred to the Department of War. Cox believed that industrial progress such as railroads and telegraph lines were no excuse to break treaties with the Indians. Cox believed that Native Americans derived no benefits from frontier towns that took away pasture lands from the buffalo herds, an Indian food staple. Cox believed that keeping promises to the Indians, rather than breaking treaties, was essential for peace. Cox, however, viewed Indians had low intelligence, were conceited, and made poor diplomats. In 1871, after Cox had resigned from office, Congress and President Grant created a comprehensive law that ended the Indian treaty system; the law treated individual Native Americans as wards of the federal government, rather than dealing with the tribes as sovereign entities.</p> <p>In early 1870, Sioux Indians in Wyoming, under the leadership of Chief Red Cloud and Chief Spotted Tail, were upset as white settlers encroached on Indian land. To avoid war, Red Cloud asked to see President Grant, who along with Spotted Tail, were allowed to journey East to Washington. Cox looked forward to their visit, hoping to convince the Sioux chiefs of the federal government's commitment to Indian treaties, and also to impress them with the power and grandeur of the nation, so they would be fearful of making war. Arriving in Washington, the chiefs had conversations with Cox, Ely Parker, and President Grant. On June 1, the chiefs were given a tour of Washington, but failed to be awed into submission. On June 2, Cox was scolded by Spotted Tail for not keeping the Treaty of 1868. In response, Cox lectured Spotted Tail that complaining was not manly, and that the Grant administration's Indian policies had positive results. Spotted Tail jested to Cox, that Cox would have slit his throat if he had to live through the troubles Spotted Tail was forced to endure. On June 3, Red Cloud took a similar tact as Spotted Tail, emphasizing he would not give up the old ways. Red Cloud asked Cox for food and ammunition so his people could hunt and not starve, railed against broken treaties, and forcing Indians into starvation. Cox put the chiefs off and told them they would speak with President Grant.</p> <p>On June 7, Cox attempted to placate the Indian chiefs that President Grant, the "Great White Father", acted not out of fear, but had the desire to do the right thing. Cox told the Indians they would get all they asked for, except for guns, and Cox personally promised to see the treaties were kept to the letter. Meeting the Indians, President Grant was warm and welcome and emphasized the same sentiments as Cox. Grant gave the chiefs a formal State Dinner at the White House, that proved to emphasize a clash of two cultures. The chiefs were given fine foods and wine but were especially fond of strawberry ice cream. Spotted Tail was reported to have commented that his white hosts ate far better foods than the rations sent to the Indians. At their final meeting, Cox offered several more concessions, and allowed the Indians to give names of agents they would prefer to act as interlocutors with the government. Cox also promised to give the chiefs seventeen horses. Red Cloud apologized to Cox for his rudeness, while Cox promised to promote Indian interest. Before returning to Wyoming the Indians visited New York City, and the philanthropist eastern papers demanded a more generous Sioux policy. Cox sent the Indians the promised seventeen horses and arranged for a group of reformers to accompany the promised goods. The arrival of the aid package did much to calm the situation and war was averted. One historian noted that the Washington visit was a success, while Red Cloud adopted a policy of diplomacy rather than war.</p> <p>In August 1870, Secretary Cox came into conflict with President Grant over the fraudulent McGarrahan claims. Grant wanted the McGarrahan claims either settled by Congress or if Congress failed to do so then his administration. Although Grant believed there was fraud in the matter he wanted the McGarrahan claims settled. Cox, however, in a letter to the President, told Grant that he wanted nothing to do with the McGarrahan claims, believing that McGarrahan was entirely fraudulent in asking for a patent on land claims in California. Cox stated that one of McGarrahan's attorneys was instructed to bribe Cox $20,000 for him to approve that patent. McGarrahan had applied for a patent on California agriculture land to be bought up at a low price. However, the land was actually used for gold mining purposes. Cox appealed to Grant not to have Cox appear before a District Court in regards to the McGarrahan claims and to hold a Cabinet meeting over the matter. Cox believed that the District Court had no jurisdiction over that matter and that the Department of Interior had sole jurisdiction. When Grant gave no support to Cox over not appearing before the court, Cox saw this as an additional reason for continuing in office—though civil service reform was the proximate cause of his resignation.</p> <p>Dissatisfaction over the Grant administration, his appointments of family and friends, corruption at the New York Customs House, and his attempt to annex Santo Domingo, led many reformers to seek new leadership. Grant's prosecution of the Ku Klux Klan alienated former Republican allies, who believed civil service reform should have priority over civil rights of blacks. In 1870, Senator Carl Schurz of Missouri, a German immigrant, bolted from the regular Republican Party. After Cox resigned office the same year, many reformers believed that Grant was incapable of reforming civil service. Grant, however, had yet not given up on civil service reform and he created the Civil Service Commission, authorized and funded by Congress, whose rules would be effective January 1, 1872. Grant appointed reformer and Harper's Weekly editor George William Curtis to head the commission. Grant appointment Columbus Delano, Grant's third cousin and replacement of Cox, however, exempted the Interior Department from the Commission's rules, later saying the Department was too large for compliance.</p> <p>In March 1871, a disgruntled Cox organized a breakaway nucleus of reforming Republicans in Cincinnati, when 100 Republicans signed a pact, separating themselves from the regular Republican Party, calling themselves Liberal Republicans.[40] Schurz, now considered a Liberal Republican ringleader, advocated full amnesty for former Confederates. The new party demanded "civil service reform, sound money, low tariffs, and state's rights." Meeting on May 1, 1872 at their convention held in Cincinnati, the Liberal Republicans nominated New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley for President of the United States. Cox had been mentioned for the presidency, but he was not put on the ballot. Reformers had favored Charles Francis Adams for president and he was put on the ballot, but he could not obtain enough votes to capture the nomination. Cox was against Greeley's nomination and withdrew his support for the Liberal Republican Revolt. Greeley, in effect, took the campaign from reformers, attacking Grant's Reconstruction policy, rather than making reform the primary goal. Grant, who was renominated by the regular Republican Party, easily won reelection over Greeley having captured 56% of the popular vote.</p> <p>Cox was considered as a U.S. Senate candidate in the 1872 election, but the Ohio legislature selected a less conservative candidate. At this time U.S. Senators were chosen by state legislatures rather than by popular vote.</p> <p>In October 1873, Cox was made President and Receiver of the Toledo and Wabash Railroad. Cox moved to Toledo, Ohio, to take charge of the property. He served from 1873 to 1878.</p> <p>Republican Party candidate Cox was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Toledo in 1876. Cox served a single term in the Forty-Fifth Congress from 1877 to 1879. Cox defeated Democratic Party candidate Frank H. Hurd. Cox received 17,276 votes against Hurd who received 15,361 votes. Cox represented the Sixth District of Ohio that included Fulton, Henry, Lucas, Ottawa, Williams, and Wood counties. Cox declined to run for a second term.</p> <p>He then returned to Cincinnati, serving as Dean of the Cincinnati Law School from 1881 to 1897. After retiring from his position as dean, he was urged by President William McKinley to accept the position of U.S. ambassador to Spain, but declined, having strong anti-imperialist views.</p> <p>Cox was President of the University of Cincinnati from 1885 to 1889.</p> <p>During his later years, Cox was a prolific author. His works include Atlanta (published in 1882); The March to the Sea: Franklin and Nashville (1882); The Second Battle of Bull Run (1882); The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee (1897); and Military Reminiscences of the Civil War (1900). His books are still today cited by scholars as objective histories and, in the case of his memoirs, incisive analyses of military practice and events.</p> <p>Cox died on summer vacation at Gloucester, Massachusetts. He is buried in Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati.</p> <p>With the exception of dissertations and a few biographical articles, there were no 20th-century book biographies of Cox's entire life. In 1901, historian William Cox Cochran authored a 35-page book titled General Jacob Dolson Cox: Early Life and Military Services published by Bibliotheca Sacra Company in Oberlin, Ohio. The Biographical Dictionary of America published in 1906 by the American Biographical Society, edited by Rossiter Johnson, had a biographical article on Cox, that included a sketch portrait of Cox. Volume 4 of Dictionary of American Biography, edited by Dumas Malone, published in 1930 by Charles Scribner's Sons, has a biographical article on Cox, authored by Homer Carey Hockett (H.C.H.). In 2014, historian Eugene D. Schmiel authored Citizen-General: Jacob Dolson Cox and the Civil War Era book biography on Cox's entire life.</p> <p>According to historian Donald K. Pickens, Cox "was a fascinating figure, very much part of his time, yet his various interests and achievements set him apart from his contemporaries." Pickens said Cox was an effective Secretary of Interior, "following Grant's policy of eventual assimilation of American Indians." Cox's endorsement of civil service reform was in opposition to powerful Republican Senators. Historian Ron Chernow said Cox was a conservative on Grant's cabinet, preaching against black suffrage and favored racial segregation, but "he enjoyed a reputation of an efficient administrator and an energetic ally of civil service reform." Historian Eugene D. Schmiel said Cox, as Grant's Secretary of Interior, "implemented one of the most far-reaching attempts to reform Indian Policy and instituted the federal government's first extensive civil service reform." Schmiel said "knowledge of Cox the citizen-general is limited, and he remains a relative unknown except to specialists and buffs." Concerning Cox's published military works, historian H.C.H. said that Cox, in general, was "recognized as an elegant and forceful writer, of fine critical ability and impartial judgement, one of the foremost military historians of the country."</p> <p>Built in 1880, Cox's home in Cincinnati is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Cox Administration Building (designed by Cass Gilbert) at Oberlin College is named in his honor.</p> <p>Around 1873, Cox became interested the study of microscopy and took it up as a recreational hobby. Cox's first studies were on fresh water forms, including rotatoria and diatomaceae. Cox displayed painstaking thoroughness and logical analysis in his microscopical studies, keeping notes of his work and observations. In 1874, Cox took up the study of photo-micrography, and in 1875 he began making a series of photo-micrographs of diatomaceae, that totaled several hundred in number. In 1881, Cox was elected fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society. Cox gave up microscopical study in 1895, believing it damaged his eyes, but his interest in microscopy remained life long.</p>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Dolson_Cox
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- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Dolson_Cox
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1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I110
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I110
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Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
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1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C119
Title:
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C119
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers 1866-1868.
Title:
Papers 1866-1868.
Governor of Ohio, U.S. Secretary of the Interior, U.S. representative, and educator. Correspondence pertaining to administrative and legislative affairs during Cox's governorship, including recommendations for appointments, applications for positions, war veterans, Ohio stocks and bonds, pardons, vouchers, confirmations of appointments, and return of fugitives. Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: 1.5 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5808945 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers 1866-1868.
1861 - Cox, Jacob Dolson - File No. C702
Title:
1861 - Cox, Jacob Dolson - File No. C702
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85301150 View
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U.S. History mss., 1612-1977
Title:
U.S. History mss., 1612-1977
Consists of individual items acquiredseparately either as a gift, purchase, transfer, or removal from a variety ofsources, relating to the United States. Additions continue to be made.
ArchivalResource: 551 items
http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/findingaids/view?doc.view=entire_text&docId=InU-Li-VAA1392 View
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- U.S. History mss., 1612-1977
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C563
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C563
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I127
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I127
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77129337 View
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Fields, James Thomas, 1817-1881. Fields-Garrison literary collection, 1869-1906.
Title:
Fields-Garrison literary collection, 1869-1906.
Literary correspondence and manuscripts acquired by James Thomas Fields, editor of the Atlantic Monthly (1861-1870), and Wendell Phillips Garrison, editor of The Nation (1862-1906). Includes an typescript (in French) of August Langel's An American Diary (1864), abstract of James Russell Lowell's "Bigelow papers," and Harriet Martineau's book, Lights of the English Lake District. Correspondents include Charles Francis Adams, Henry Ward Beecher, Edwin Thomas Booth, Robert Browning, James Bryce, Jacob Dolson Cox, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Fiske, Nathaniel Hawthorne, William Dean Howells, George Lyman Kittredge, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Elizabeth Palmer Peabody.
ArchivalResource: 800 items.2 containers.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/79449189 View
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- Fields, James Thomas, 1817-1881. Fields-Garrison literary collection, 1869-1906.
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Annotations in The Twelve decisive battles of the War, [between 1867 and 1900].
Title:
Annotations in The Twelve decisive battles of the War, [between 1867 and 1900].
Annotations written in pencil by Jacob D. Cox in margins of a copy of William Swinton's The Twelve decisive battles of the war add details regarding the Civil War battles of Antietam, Murfreesboro, Atlanta, and Nashville.
ArchivalResource: 1 v.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44970555 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Annotations in The Twelve decisive battles of the War, [between 1867 and 1900].
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C271
Title:
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C271
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Hayes-Garfield-Arthur (1877-1885): Cox, J. D.
Title:
Hayes-Garfield-Arthur (1877-1885): Cox, J. D.
ArchivalResource:
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I134
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I134
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77129385 View
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1044
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1044
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76784410 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907424 View
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. W1466
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. W1466
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Cox, Kenyon, 1856-1919. Kenyon Cox papers, circa 1860-1922.
Title:
Kenyon Cox papers, circa 1860-1922.
Included is Cox's correspondence, circa 1880 until his death in 1919, with architects, painters, sculptors, and writers including Bernard Berenson, Edwin Howland Blashfield, Will Hicock Low, John La Farge, Henry Oliver Walker, H. Siddons Mowbray, Theodore Robinson, Elliott Daingerfield, Lucia Fairchild Fuller, Howard Pyle, William A. Coffin, Russell Cowles, Daniel Chester French, Irving R. Wiles, James Monroe Hewlett, Harry Wilson Watrous, Edward R. Simmons, Maxfield and Stephen Parrish, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Louis Saint-Gaudens, John C. Van Dyke, Wendell P. Garrison, Richard Watson Gilder, Robert Underwood Johnson, the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White, Stanford White, Charles F. McKim, Cass Gilbert, Charles Adams Platt, and others. Of note are 136 from Cox to lawyer and author Leonard E. Opdyke. Correspondence, circa 1870-1922, with family members, particularly his father, Jacob Dolson Cox (a Union officer), his mother, Louise Howland King Cox (a painter), and his brother Jacob Dolson Cox, Jr. (a Cleveland industrialist and founder of the Cleveland Twist Drill Company). Correspondence of various other family members either among themselves, beginning circa 1860, or with Kenyon Cox is included. Also, manuscripts of Cox's essays, addresses, articles, and other writings on art, circa1870-1919; poetry; and juvenilia.
ArchivalResource: 602 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/505719883 View
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- Cox, Kenyon, 1856-1919. Kenyon Cox papers, circa 1860-1922.
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. N330
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. N330
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76826586 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Autograph letter signed : Cincinnati, to the President, 1880 Mar. 10.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : Cincinnati, to the President, 1880 Mar. 10.
Recommending George M. Thomas as Judge in the U.S. District of Kentucky.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270517878 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Autograph letter signed : Cincinnati, to the President, 1880 Mar. 10.
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907656 View
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Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
Title:
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
A collection of images, manuscripts, and printed material, mostly relating to the Massachusetts soldiers and regiments in the American Civil War. Some material relates to other Union regiments and the Confederate States of America.
ArchivalResource: 47 linear feet (143 boxes, 2 volumes)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog View
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- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive);, 1861-1912 (bulk).
Coggeshall, William Turner, 1824-1867. Papers 1842-1868.
Title:
Papers 1842-1868.
Ohio author, journalist, and U.S. Minister to Ecuador. Correspondence with family and with Louis Kossuth, letters written by Coggeshall and his daughter, Jessie, from Ecuador, diaries covering the Civil War, U.S. and Ohio politics, and Ecuador, articles, biographies, speeches, dispatches concerning Ohio's military preparations at the start of the Civil War, notebooks, scrapbooks, and memoranda. Includes Coggeshall's unpublished biograph of Louis Kossuth. Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: 2 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5662578 View
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- Coggeshall, William Turner, 1824-1867. Papers 1842-1868.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178924811 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/179033989 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to the President of the United States
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to the President of the United States
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907650 View
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Porter, Fitz-John, 1822-1901. Papers, 1882-1951.
Title:
Papers, 1882-1951.
Papers including a letter, 1894, from Porter, criticizing the performances of generals Ambrose E. Burnside and Jacob D. Cox in the battle of Antietam, 1862; and a letter, 1862, from John P. Jones concerning Porter's conduct at the second battle of Bull Run, 1862. The papers also contain a mimeographed report, 1951, of a "fact finding conference" which attempted to evaluate the descriptions of Porter's conduct at Second Bull Run in Kenneth Powers Williams, Lincoln finds a general (New York, 1949-1959), and Otto Eisenschiml, The celebrated case of Fitz-John Porter (Indianapolis, 1950).
ArchivalResource: 5 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/20071506 View
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- Porter, Fitz-John, 1822-1901. Papers, 1882-1951.
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Georgia, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Georgia, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120385301 View
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1864 - Cox, J D - File No. C496
Title:
1864 - Cox, J D - File No. C496
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1531
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1531
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Bickham, Charles G. [Bickham collection] 1728-1949 1860-1902.
Title:
[Bickham collection] 1728-1949 1860-1902.
The Bickham Collection contains materials created or collected by Dayton Journal editor William D. Bickham, by his sons Daniel D. Bickham and Charles G. Bickham, and by his wife's family, the Strickle family of Wilmington, Ohio. Materials primarily concern the family members' careers in the military, politics, and journalism. The collection includes correspondence, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, photographs, and military papers. The subject matter include late 19th century Republican politics on state and national levels; military activities during the American Civil War, the Spanish-American War, and the Philippine Insurrection; and the history of the Dayton Journal newspaper.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/713916240 View
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- Bickham, Charles G. [Bickham collection] 1728-1949 1860-1902.
Cochran, William Cox. Biography, 1940- .
Title:
Biography, 1940- .
Biography by Cochran of Major General Jacob Dolson Cox, documenting his life as an Ohio politician and Civil War general between 1828-1879. During his political career Cox also served in the U.S. House of Representatives and as Secretary of Interior in the Grant Administration.
ArchivalResource: 0.2 c.f. (2 volumes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145781784 View
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- Cochran, William Cox. Biography, 1940- .
Bickham Papers, 1728-1949, 1860-1902
Title:
Bickham Papers 1728-1949 1860-1902
The Bickham Collection contains materials created or collected by Dayton Journal editor William D. Bickham, by his sons Daniel D. Bickham and Charles G. Bickham, and by his wife's family, the Strickle family of Wilmington, Ohio. Materials primarily concern the family members' careers in the military, politics, and journalism. The collection includes correspondence, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, photographs, and military papers. The subject matter include late 19th century Republican politics on state and national levels; military activities during the American Civil War, the Spanish-American War, and the Philippine Insurrection; and the history of the Dayton Journal newspaper.
ArchivalResource:
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/archives/ead/ODa0021 View
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- Bickham Papers, 1728-1949, 1860-1902
William C. Cochran family. Papers 1839-1936.
Title:
Papers 1839-1936.
The William C. Cochran family papers consist of correspondence, genealogical records, photographs, research files, and writings. Included here are a large number of letters of the extended Cochran family--though the bulk is to William C. Cochran. The correspondence provides a glimpse of the family and their private affairs in Ohio, as well as William C. Cochran's experiences growing up during the Civil War and as an adult. The papers also document Cochran's career as partrician historian. Much of his later life was spent compiling information from newspapers and other sources, resulting in two major unpublished biographes of Jacob D. Cox. The Cochran family papers also contain a small number of files related to Jacob D. Cox and Cochran's father, William Cochran. Of significance are ten letters written to Jacob D. Cox by William T. Sherman that discuss interpretations of the Civil War, and a notebook containing transcriptions of letters Cox sent to his wife during the Civil War. The William C. Cochran family papers are rich in detail about Oberlin College, the role of its alumnis in the Civil War, and about several great families connected to Oberlin.
ArchivalResource: 11.1 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26209155 View
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- William C. Cochran family. Papers 1839-1936.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1863 - Cox, J D - File No. O120
Title:
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. O120
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Cox, J D - State: District of Columbia - Year: 1869
Title:
Cox, J D - State: District of Columbia - Year: 1869
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70518583 View
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Address, speeches, papers, etc. / [J.D. Cox].
Title:
Address, speeches, papers, etc. / [J.D. Cox]. 1866-1891.
ArchivalResource: v. : ill. ; 23 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43961948 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Address, speeches, papers, etc. / [J.D. Cox].
Cox, J D - State: Ohio - Year: 1866
Title:
Cox, J D - State: Ohio - Year: 1866
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70605835 View
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James A. Garfield Papers, 1775-1889, (bulk 1850-1881)
Title:
James A. Garfield Papers 1775-1889 (bulk 1850-1881)
United States president, army officer, lawyer, and educator. Family, personal, and official correspondence including records of Garfield's Civil War military service, diary (1848-1881), speeches and other public statements, legal papers, genealogical material, college notebooks, tributes, printed matter, scrapbooks, and other material relating primarily to Garfield's career and death.
ArchivalResource: 80,000 items; 462 containers plus 26 oversize; 117.6 linear feet; 177 microfilm reels
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms008147 View
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- Resource Relation
- James A. Garfield Papers, 1775-1889, (bulk 1850-1881)
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C710
Title:
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C710
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers.
Title:
Papers. 1866 Nov. 5.
Proclamation as governor of Ohio, of the use hence forth of a new Great Seal of the State as directed by the General Assembly.
ArchivalResource: 1 item, 1 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/8499970 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I115
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I115
DigitalArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907412 View
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Thayer, John M. (John Milton), 1820-1906. Letter : Omaha, Neb., to J.D. Cox, 1870 Oct. 17.
Title:
Letter : Omaha, Neb., to J.D. Cox, 1870 Oct. 17.
Letter, marked private, written by Nebraska senator John M. Thayer on Oct. 17, 1870 to Jacob Cox, Secretary of the Interior.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 folded sheet (4 p.)) ; 25 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/40406623 View
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- Thayer, John M. (John Milton), 1820-1906. Letter : Omaha, Neb., to J.D. Cox, 1870 Oct. 17.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
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1864 - Cox, J D - File No. C1586
Title:
1864 - Cox, J D - File No. C1586
DigitalArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
Acme-Cleveland Corporation. Records, 1869-1982.
Title:
Records, 1869-1982.
Histories, correspondence, writings by company executives, especially J.D. Cox, Jr., articles of incorporation, annual reports, ledger books, publications, such as catalogs, brochures and company newsletters, records of acquisitions and subsidiary firms, and newspaper clippings, pertaining to the Cleveland Twist Drill Co., National Acme Co., and Acme-Cleveland Corp., and to their predecessor firms. The collection traces the development of a major Cleveland machine-tool corporation, as well as developments within the metal-cutting and machine-tool industries in Cleveland and the U.S. during their formative years, and, in particular, to the very important decade of 1942-52. The collection also details the lives of Jacob D. Cox II and his son Jacob D. Cox, Jr., particularly his economic and political views.
ArchivalResource: 5.81 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23103035 View
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- Resource Relation
- Acme-Cleveland Corporation. Records, 1869-1982.
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/176561933 View
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- Resource Relation
McMillen, William L. Papers 1852-1896.
Title:
Papers 1852-1896.
Papers of William L. McMillen, Ohio and Louisiana, including correspondence dealing with lectures in Columbus and Cincinnati, Ohio, military affairs during the Civil War, and Louisiana politics during reconstruction.
ArchivalResource: 72 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6159904 View
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- Resource Relation
- McMillen, William L. Papers 1852-1896.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Title:
Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Scrapbook collection of Civil War photographs and autographs, assembled by Philip Case Lockwood.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (.38 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00542/catalog View
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- Resource Relation
- Philip Case Lockwood memorial collection of Civil War portraits and autographs, 1862-ca. 1886.
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers 1866-1893.
Title:
Papers 1866-1893.
Scattered correspondence, 1866-1893, of Jacob Dolson Cox, including one letter to W.H. Smith, Ohio Secretary of State which includes a proposed proclamation relative to extending the suffrage to qualified voters in the military service.
ArchivalResource: 5 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6247202 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers 1866-1893.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907647 View
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- Resource Relation
Garrison family papers, 1801-1948 (inclusive), 1840-1907 (bulk).
Title:
Garrison family papers, 1801-1948 (inclusive), 1840-1907 (bulk).
Papers of American abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison and his family.
ArchivalResource: 15 boxes (7.5 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00673/catalog View
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- Resource Relation
- Garrison family papers, 1801-1948 (inclusive), 1840-1907 (bulk).
735 C CB 1863: Letter to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton from Alphonso Taft at Cincinnati Nominating Brigadier General Jacob D. Cox for Promotion to Major General
Title:
735 C CB 1863: Letter to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton from Alphonso Taft at Cincinnati Nominating Brigadier General Jacob D. Cox for Promotion to Major General
ArchivalResource:
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Typed Copy of Letter from E. B. Washburne, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from E. B. Washburne, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/179036124 View
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- Resource Relation
Opdycke, Emerson, 1830-1884. Papers 1861-1913.
Title:
Papers 1861-1913.
Correspondence, diaries, clippings, and materials relating to General Emerson Opdycke of the 41st and 125th Ohio Volunteer Infantries, and his military career. Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: 2 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6114398 View
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- Resource Relation
- Opdycke, Emerson, 1830-1884. Papers 1861-1913.
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Letter signed : Washington, D.C. to the President, 1869 Dec. 11.
Title:
Letter signed : Washington, D.C. to the President, 1869 Dec. 11.
Informing him that Mr. Valentine Melah, appointed steward of the President's household, has filed his oath of office and official bond.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270538091 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Letter signed : Washington, D.C. to the President, 1869 Dec. 11.
Century Company records
Title:
Century Company records
The Century Company published the Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, which was widely regarded as the best general periodical of its time, performing a role as cultural arbiter during the 1880s and 1890s. It was founded in New York City in 1881 and also published the children's magazine St. Nicholas, dictionaries, and books. The Century Company records date from 1870 to the 1930s and chiefly contain correspondence with contributors, readers, public figures, and literary agents. A number of manuscripts and proofs in the collection are extensively edited and taken with annotations on letters provide a detailed record of the outlook, standards, and functions of the company.
ArchivalResource: 60.4 linear feet; 151 boxes
http://archives.nypl.org/mss/504 View
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- Century Company records, 1870-1924
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907421 View
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- Resource Relation
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to the President
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to the President
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178924803 View
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- Resource Relation
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/179036132 View
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers, 1880 Jan. 14.
Title:
Papers, 1880 Jan. 14.
Letter, Jan. 14, 1880, from J.D. Cox, Cincinnati, O., to D.B. Canfield, & Co. discontinuing his subscription to the "American Law Register."
ArchivalResource: 1 item, 1 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6615532 View
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- Resource Relation
- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers, 1880 Jan. 14.
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I93
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I93
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77128718 View
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- Resource Relation
Letters from various correspondents, 1854-1897.
Title:
Letters from various correspondents, 1854-1897.
Letters toMassachusetts lawyer Edward Lillie Pierce from Charles Francis Adams, Samuel PortlandChase, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Carl Schurz, and many other correspondents.
ArchivalResource: 1 box (.5 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01482/catalog View
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- Letters from various correspondents, 1854-1897.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/176561934 View
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- Resource Relation
Cox, J D - State: Ohio - Year: 1866
Title:
Cox, J D - State: Ohio - Year: 1866
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70309611 View
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- Resource Relation
1862 - Cox, J D - File No. C1330
Title:
1862 - Cox, J D - File No. C1330
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85392251 View
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- Resource Relation
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Tennessee, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Tennessee, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120383085 View
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- Resource Relation
Cochran, William Cox, 1848-1936. Political experiences of Major General Jacob Dolson Cox, 1940.
Title:
Political experiences of Major General Jacob Dolson Cox, 1940.
Consists of a bound, ribbon copy of William Cox Cochran's unfinished biography of his stepfather, Major General Jacob Dolson Cox. This unpublished manuscript was prepared after William Cox Cochran's death in 1936.
ArchivalResource: .4 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/44035177 View
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- Resource Relation
- Cochran, William Cox, 1848-1936. Political experiences of Major General Jacob Dolson Cox, 1940.
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I144
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I144
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77129424 View
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- Resource Relation
Speed, Thomas, 1841-1905. Letter book, 1863-1896.
Title:
Letter book, 1863-1896.
Correspondence of Thomas Speed with members of his family during his service as a Union officer, first with the 8th Kentucky Cavalry and later with the 12th Kentucky Infantry. The letters describe life in the army, activities, and military actions. The letter book also contains post war correspondence with Governor Jacob D. Cox of Ohio, General James M. Shackelford, Colonel Lovell H. Rousseau, Colonel J.S. White, R.J. Wood, John M. Draper, and J.W. Gault concerning details of Civil War actions, particularly the details of the battle of Franklin, Tenn. A memoir of Speed's activities during the Civil War, written 1871-1872, is contained between pages 77-201. The volume contains several clippings from newspapers and magazines concerning Civil War battles, some written by Thomas Speed.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (94 items)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49323014 View
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- Speed, Thomas, 1841-1905. Letter book, 1863-1896.
Schofield, John McAllister, 1831-1906. Autograph letter signed : "Hd. Qrs. Army of the Ohio," to Brig. Gen. Cox, [1864] July 28.
Title:
Autograph letter signed : "Hd. Qrs. Army of the Ohio," to Brig. Gen. Cox, [1864] July 28.
Concerning the successes in battle of Gen. Howard and one of Cox's batteries.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270633781 View
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- Resource Relation
- Schofield, John McAllister, 1831-1906. Autograph letter signed : "Hd. Qrs. Army of the Ohio," to Brig. Gen. Cox, [1864] July 28.
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I150
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I150
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77129482 View
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1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C703
Title:
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C703
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85643980 View
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- Resource Relation
1868 - Cox, J D - File No. O9
Title:
1868 - Cox, J D - File No. O9
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77080844 View
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1881 - File No. 6101 - Cox, Jacob D - Ohio
Title:
1881 - File No. 6101 - Cox, Jacob D - Ohio
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146336586 View
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Salmon P. Chase Papers
Title:
Salmon P. Chase Papers
Salmon P. Chase (1808-1873) was a career politician and an influential Union decision-maker during the Civil War. He served as governor of Ohio, U.S. senator, secretary of the Treasury, and Supreme Court chief justice. The Salmon P. Chase Papers, which span the years 1824-1884, provide tremendous insight into the professional life of Chase and provide information on the National Bank and specie debates, as well as the abolition movement from the early 1820s through the Civil War. This collection contains correspondence, speech notes, newspaper clippings, biographical material, court opinions, financial papers, and a myriad of miscellaneous items. In addition to containing Chase's papers, this collection also contains the papers of J. W. Schuckers, Chase's personal secretary and biographer. Schuckers’s papers give further insight into the economic situation immediately following the Civil War and include correspondence, newspapers, investments records, and other financial papers.
ArchivalResource: 12.0 Linear feet ; 43 boxes; 16 volumes; 10 flat files
http://www2.hsp.org/collections/manuscripts/c/Chase0121.html View
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- Chase, Salmon P. (Salmon Portland), 1808-1873. Collection, 1824-1881.
Porter, Fitz-John, 1822-1901. Papers, 1870-1883.
Title:
Papers, 1870-1883.
This collection consists of a copy of a fifteen-page Cox letter to Garfield and a thirty-five-page draft of Porter's rebuttal. Also included are a number of letters, 1883, to Senator George F. Hoar (1826-1904), concerning various opinions about the Porter case.
ArchivalResource: 1 folder (28 items)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/191259626 View
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- Resource Relation
- Porter, Fitz-John, 1822-1901. Papers, 1870-1883.
Cox, J D - Ohio - 1863
Title:
Cox, J D - Ohio - 1863
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/100114452 View
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- Resource Relation
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Tennessee, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Tennessee, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120384254 View
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Letter signed : Washington, to the President, 1870 May 9.
Title:
Letter signed : Washington, to the President, 1870 May 9.
Submitting a copy of a report from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and recommending that it receive executive approval.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (2 p.) ; (8vo)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/270538077 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Letter signed : Washington, to the President, 1870 May 9.
Horace Elisha Scudder correspondence
Title:
Horace Elisha Scudder correspondence
Letters to American editor Horace Elisha Scudder from various correspondents.
ArchivalResource: 29 v. (3.5 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01458/catalog View
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- Correspondence, 1864-1906.
Typed Copy of Letter from E. B. Washburne, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from E. B. Washburne, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/186437871 View
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1862 - Cox, J D - File No. C875
Title:
1862 - Cox, J D - File No. C875
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85390813 View
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- Resource Relation
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D D Cox, Washington, 1865
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D D Cox, Washington, 1865
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120471678 View
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- Resource Relation
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I90
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I90
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77128676 View
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- Resource Relation
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1490
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1490
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76786055 View
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- Resource Relation
Viars family : Papers, 1861-ca. 1913 1861-1865.
Title:
Viars family : Papers, 1861-ca. 1913 1861-1865.
Letters of the three Viars brothers written while serving in the 7th Ohio Cavalry Regiment in the Civil War. The describe the everyday life of a soldier as well as the fighting done by the unit. The battles of Atlanta, Ga., Selma, Ala., and Knoxville, Tenn. are talked about in some detail. The collection also includes a circular specifying the qualifications for medical service.
ArchivalResource: .33 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/46605019 View
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- Viars family : Papers, 1861-ca. 1913 1861-1865.
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D D Cox, North Carolina, 1865
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D D Cox, North Carolina, 1865
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120471541 View
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- Resource Relation
Janney family. Papers.
Title:
Papers. 1796-1905.
Correspondence, essays, and other papers (1830-80), of John J. Janney (1812-1907) and his wife, Rebecca (Smith) Janney, relating to the Whig, Republican, and Union parties, temperance, women's suffrage, prison reform, and banking; and correspondence and other papers of their daughter, Francis (Janney) Derby, pertaining to her medical studies and practice, l867-90. Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: 5 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5718009 View
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- Resource Relation
- Janney family. Papers.
Allen, Robert. Papers, 1861-1863.
Title:
Papers, 1861-1863.
Correspondence from Allen a Union soldier, back to his family in Ohio as he moves through Va. and Tenn. and later spends time in a Covington, Ky. hospital; he discusses soldier's life, casualties, repairing railroad lines, and leaders such as Generals Jacob Cox and Ebenezer Dumont; an undated letter from Rev. J.S. Landis announces death.
ArchivalResource: 7 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/46708348 View
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- Resource Relation
- Allen, Robert. Papers, 1861-1863.
1861 - Cox, Jacob Dolso - File No. C375
Title:
1861 - Cox, Jacob Dolso - File No. C375
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85300001 View
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- Resource Relation
Salmon P. Chase Papers
Title:
Salmon P. Chase Papers
Salmon P. Chase (1808-1873) was a career politician and an influential Union decision-maker during the Civil War. He served as governor of Ohio, U.S. senator, secretary of the Treasury, and Supreme Court chief justice. The Salmon P. Chase Papers, which span the years 1824-1884, provide tremendous insight into the professional life of Chase and provide information on the National Bank and specie debates, as well as the abolition movement from the early 1820s through the Civil War. This collection contains correspondence, speech notes, newspaper clippings, biographical material, court opinions, financial papers, and a myriad of miscellaneous items. In addition to containing Chase's papers, this collection also contains the papers of J. W. Schuckers, Chase's personal secretary and biographer. Schuckers’s papers give further insight into the economic situation immediately following the Civil War and include correspondence, newspapers, investments records, and other financial papers.
ArchivalResource: 12.0 Linear feet ; 43 boxes; 16 volumes; 10 flat files
http://www2.hsp.org/collections/manuscripts/c/Chase0121.html View
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Benjamin, Samuel Nicoll, 1839-1886. Papers.
Title:
Papers. 1856-1886.
Army officer, Medal of Honor recipient. Papers include 78 cadet letters to his mother and father, 1856-1860; 1 private journal, 14 October 1857; personal correspondence; 3 orders and correspondence regarding his military activities during the Civil War; 3 maps are also included.
ArchivalResource: 158 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6475830 View
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- Benjamin, Samuel Nicoll, 1839-1886. Papers.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of State Hamilton Fish to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907661 View
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Cox, J D - State: Ohio - Year: 1867
Title:
Cox, J D - State: Ohio - Year: 1867
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/70419596 View
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers, 1851-1901.
Title:
Papers, 1851-1901.
The Jacob Dolson Cox papers consist mainly of indexed correspondence, incoming and outgoing. Outgoing correspondence is in the form of letter press copy books and manifold copy books. Other records include letters and papers relating to the Kanawha Campaign (June-August 1861-July-August 1862), Battle of Franklin (1864), and the Atlanta Campaign (1864). Talks and writings include political addresses, historical essays, book reviews, and works on microscopy.
ArchivalResource: 8.0 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26226983 View
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- Resource Relation
- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers, 1851-1901.
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1359
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1359
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76785562 View
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- Resource Relation
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers, 1865 Oct. 1.
Title:
Papers, 1865 Oct. 1.
Letter, Oct. 1, 1865, from Brig. Gen. J.D. Cox, Cincinnati, O., to J.J. Janney relative to the distribution of packages (containing ballots?) from the Union Party Executive Committee.
ArchivalResource: 1 item, 1 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6439835 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers, 1865 Oct. 1.
Steele family. Papers 1786-1889.
Title:
Papers 1786-1889.
Papers of a Dayton, Ohio family, especially James (1778-1841), and Robert (1819-1891). Correspondence includes a description of Washington, D.C. social life (1806), political issues, Steele family activities, and personal affairs. Other documents include certificates of appointment and commissions, and a constitution of the Zanesville, Ohio Tammany Society (1810). Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: .25 cubic foot.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6073684 View
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- Resource Relation
- Steele family. Papers 1786-1889.
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/176561932 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C196
Title:
1863 - Cox, J D - File No. C196
DigitalArchivalResource:
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Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
Title:
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive); 1861-1912 (bulk).
A collection of images, manuscripts, and printed material, mostly relating to the Massachusetts soldiers and regiments in the American Civil War. Some material relates to other Union regiments and the Confederate States of America.
ArchivalResource: 47 linear feet (143 boxes, 2 volumes)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00124/catalog View
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- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection, 1724-1933 (inclusive);, 1861-1912 (bulk).
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907419 View
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Message of President Ulysses S. Grant nominating his cabinet, including Elihu B. Washburne as Secretary of State, Alex T. Stewart as Secretary of the Treasury, Adolph E. Borie as Secretary of the Navy, J.A.J. Criswell as Postmaster General, E.R. Hoar as Attorney General, and Jacob D. Cox as Secretary of the Interior
Title:
Message of President Ulysses S. Grant nominating his cabinet, including Elihu B. Washburne as Secretary of State, Alex T. Stewart as Secretary of the Treasury, Adolph E. Borie as Secretary of the Navy, J.A.J. Criswell as Postmaster General, E.R. Hoar as Attorney General, and Jacob D. Cox as Secretary of the Interior
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/306315 View
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C361
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C361
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76781940 View
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Ohio - South -- Cox, J. D.
Title:
Ohio - South -- Cox, J. D.
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/5980029 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, North Carolina, 1865
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, North Carolina, 1865
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120474828 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
1861 - Cox, J D - File No. C396
Title:
1861 - Cox, J D - File No. C396
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85300089 View
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- Resource Relation
Cox, J.D. -- Major General
Title:
Cox, J.D. -- Major General
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1758498 View
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- Resource Relation
1866 - Cox, J D - File No. O191
Title:
1866 - Cox, J D - File No. O191
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76955984 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Ohio, 1865
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Ohio, 1865
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120473467 View
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- Resource Relation
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to the Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to the Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/186437875 View
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- Resource Relation
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to the Secretary of State
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to the Secretary of State
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178924812 View
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Garfield, James A. (James Abram), II, 1894-. James A. Garfield II family papers, 1873-1930.
Title:
James A. Garfield II family papers, 1873-1930.
Consists of correspondence, an autograph book, scrapbooks, speech reading lessons, drawings, newspaper clippings, and notebooks of President James A. Garfield, James Rudolph and Helen Newell Garfield, and James A. and Edwina Glenn Garfield. The papers relating to President Garfield include a scrapbook compiled in 1874 containing documents which refute charges regarding improprieties in military contract awards, a political tract annotated by President Garfield, and a collection of Garfield "Maxims," as well as commemorative publications and a scrapbook of condolences sent to the family after his death. The collection also contains correspondence and other documents related to James Rudolph and Helen Newell Garfield, including teaching materials for speech reading used by Helen Newell Garfield, and letters of Edwina Glenn Garfield to her husband James A. Garfield II discussing concerns of a young, upper class wife of the 1920s.
ArchivalResource: 1.8 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/43145994 View
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- Resource Relation
- Garfield, James A. (James Abram), II, 1894-. James A. Garfield II family papers, 1873-1930.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907418 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs N. G. Taylor to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs N. G. Taylor to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/186437873 View
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1866 - Cox, J D - File No. O99
Title:
1866 - Cox, J D - File No. O99
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76955641 View
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Schofield, John McAllister, 1831-1906. Papers of John McAllister Schofield, 1837-1906 (bulk 1862-1895).
Title:
Papers of John McAllister Schofield, 1837-1906 (bulk 1862-1895).
Correspondence, diary (1863), journals (1876-1891), military papers (special field orders, telegrams, and endorsements), memoranda, reports, despatches, financial records, court-martial papers, mss. and notes of speeches, articles and a memoir, maps, memorabilia, and printed material. Pertains chiefly to field operations in Missouri where Schofield commanded the "Army of the Frontier" and later the Dept. of the Missouri; operations of the Dept. and Army of the Ohio in Sherman's Atlanta campaign; Union victories at Franklin and Nashville, Tenn.; Schofield's service in 1865-1866 as confidential agent of the State Dept. to persuade French officials to recall forces of Maxmilian in Mexico; Reconstruction in Virginia under Schofield (1866-1868); and Andrew Johnson's fight with Congress. Nearly half of the collection concerns Schofield's service as commander of the Depts. of Missouri (1869-1870) and of the Pacific (1870-1876); as Superintendent of the Military Academy (1876-1881); and as commander of the Military Divisions of the Gulf, the Pacific, the Missouri, and Atlantic (1881-1888). Many papers relate to his command of the Army (1888-1895). Subjects mentioned in the postwar period are Indian affairs, civilian-military relations, the Fitz John Porter case, coastal defense, labor strikes and unrest in Chicago and on the western railroads, and the role of the commander of the Army in relation to the Secretary of War. Correspondents include Francis P. Blair, Jr., Jacob D. Cox, Ulysses S. Grant, Henry Wager Halleck, Fitz-John Porter, Philip H. Sheridan, William T. Sherman, and Alfred Howe Terry.
ArchivalResource: 30,000 items.99 containers, plus 1 oversize.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/74984707 View
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- Schofield, John McAllister, 1831-1906. Papers of John McAllister Schofield, 1837-1906 (bulk 1862-1895).
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Jacob D. Cox papers, 1868-1940.
Title:
Jacob D. Cox papers, 1868-1940.
Three letters (1868-1869) from Cox to George B. Wright and eleven letters (1893-1899) to James Ford Rhodes. Also includes a two-volume work entitled, "Political Experiences of Major General Jacob Dolson Cox," by William Cox Cochran (1940).
ArchivalResource: 15 items.1 container.0.3 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70981815 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Jacob D. Cox papers, 1868-1940.
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Title:
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Autograph letters and documents of officers and statesmen associated with the Union in the Civil War collected by Frederick Myers Dearborn.
ArchivalResource: 8 boxes (4 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01501/catalog View
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- Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part III: The Civil War: The Union, 1804-1915.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/179036133 View
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- Resource Relation
1861 - Cox, J D - File No. C970
Title:
1861 - Cox, J D - File No. C970
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85302157 View
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- Resource Relation
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part I: The Revolution and the Administration, 1669-1958.
Title:
Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part I: The Revolution and the Administration, 1669-1958.
Autograph letters and documents of American political and military leaders collected by Frederick Myers Dearborn.
ArchivalResource: 28 boxes (14 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01499/catalog View
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- Frederick M. Dearborn collection of military and political Americana, Part I: The Revolution and the Administration, 1669-1958.
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I155
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I155
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77129493 View
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1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I147
Title:
1869 - Cox, J D - File No. I147
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77129456 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Tennessee, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, Tennessee, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120445407 View
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Hassaurek, F. (Friedrich), 1831-1885. Papers 1849-1881.
Title:
Papers 1849-1881.
Lawyer, editor, political leader, author, lecturer, and diplomat. Correspondence pertaining to political, personal, literary and newspaper affairs; Mixed Claims Commission (U.S., Ecuador, and New Granada) documents (1865-67); and MSS. of Hassaurek's writings. Contact repository for more information.
ArchivalResource: 2 cubic feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5662772 View
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- Hassaurek, F. (Friedrich), 1831-1885. Papers 1849-1881.
Carrington Family papers, 1749-1929
Title:
Carrington Family papers 1749-1929
The papers consist of correspondence, pamphlets, printed material, scrapbooks, sermons, and other papers relating to members of the Carrington family. Henry Beebee Carrington (1824-1912) and his grandfather, David Lewis Beebe (1763-1803), are two central figures in the papers. Material relating to David Lewis Beebe, including essays and sermons, documents his religious duties in Connecticut and family concerns in Ohio. Henry Beebee Carrington material includes correspondence, a diary, a letterbook, maps, pamphlets, scrapbooks, and other items documenting his experiences as a student at Yale University, as a lawyer practicing in Ohio, and as a commanding officer for Union forces during the Civil War. Carrington's role in military campaigns and treaty negotiations with Indians of the American West is also documented. His design of Fort Philip Kearney, the site of a famous massacre, and treaty negotiations with the Flathead Indians of Montana are detailed in pamphlets, scrapbooks and other papers.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear feet (8 boxes, 1 folio)
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0130 View
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- Carrington Family papers, 1749-1929
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907649 View
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- Resource Relation
1868 - Cox, Jacob D - File No. P721
Title:
1868 - Cox, Jacob D - File No. P721
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/77085019 View
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1862 - Cox, J D - File No. C1005
Title:
1862 - Cox, J D - File No. C1005
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/85391251 View
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Cox, J D - Virginia - 1863
Title:
Cox, J D - Virginia - 1863
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/100127360 View
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1224
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1224
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76785145 View
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Shellenberger, John K., b. 1843?. John K. Shellenberger correspondence, 1862-1913.
Title:
John K. Shellenberger correspondence, 1862-1913.
Chiefly post-Civil War letters to Shellenberger in response to his articles on the battle of Franklin, Tenn. Correspondents, many of whom participated in the battle, include Mendal Churchill, Joseph Conrad, E. C. Dawes, John Quincy Lane, William Gates Le Duc, Stephen D. Lee, David Sloane Stanley, Edward G. Whitesides, and Thomas John Wood. Also includes two letters of Gen. Jacob D. Cox pertaining to a promotion for Col. Emerson Opdycke for performance in the battle.
ArchivalResource: 20 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70981026 View
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- Shellenberger, John K., b. 1843?. John K. Shellenberger correspondence, 1862-1913.
Stanley, David Sloane, 1828-1902. Memoirs and related papers, 1862-1897.
Title:
Memoirs and related papers, 1862-1897.
Reminiscent papers focusing especially on the Civil War experiences of a career officer (breveted major general) in the U.S. Army.
ArchivalResource: 0.2 cu. ft. (1 box, containing 1 v.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/313853247 View
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- Stanley, David Sloane, 1828-1902. Memoirs and related papers, 1862-1897.
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Correspondence, 1852-1900.
Title:
Correspondence, 1852-1900.
Micofilmed copies of handwritten correspondence. The materials relate to Cox's work as Secretary of the Interior, to the administration of Ulysses S. Grant, to the suffrage of Afro-Americans, to the Reconstruction of the United States following the American Civil War (1861-1865), to the formation of the Liberal Republican Party, and to the debate on the gold standard for currency. These items are reels number 1, 3, and 5 of a seven reel collection.
ArchivalResource: 3 reels of microfilm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122638447 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Correspondence, 1852-1900.
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. N318
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. N318
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76826553 View
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B. F. Wade Papers, 1832-1886, (bulk 1852-1869)
Title:
B. F. Wade Papers 1832-1886 (bulk 1852-1869)
Lawyer, United States senator from Ohio, and Republican Party leader. Chiefly political correspondence relating to Wade’s career in the Senate as well as personal letters concerning his law practice and business. Includes printed speeches, maps, family letters, business records, and other material.
ArchivalResource: 3,500 items; 18 containers; 4 linear feet; 11 microfilm reels
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms009336 View
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- B. F. Wade Papers, 1832-1886, (bulk 1852-1869)
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C871
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C871
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76783800 View
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1865 - Cox, J W - File No. C1244
Title:
1865 - Cox, J W - File No. C1244
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76785200 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, North Carolina, 1865
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, North Carolina, 1865
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120469904 View
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Field Dispatches Sent by General Jacob D. Cox , 3/1864 - 4/1865
Title:
Field Dispatches Sent by General Jacob D. Cox , 3/1864 - 4/1865
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/2580402 View
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- Resource Relation
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1223
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1223
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76785139 View
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Cox, I D - [Blank] - 1863
Title:
Cox, I D - [Blank] - 1863
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/100117064 View
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This document is recommending Jacob Dolson Cox to the rank of Major General by Ambrose Everett Burnside and others. This was for his actions at the Battle of Antietam.
Citation
- Resource Relation
Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Selected Civil War records.
Title:
Selected Civil War records. 1861-1865.
ArchivalResource: 185 p., ca. 19 maps, 2 ports. : ill.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23131423 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Selected Civil War records.
Memoirs and related papers, 1862-1897.
Title:
Memoirs and related papers, 1862-1897.
Reminiscent papers focusing especially on the Civil War experiences of a career officer (breveted major general) in the U.S. Army.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.mnhs.org/library/findaids/p2262.xml View
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- Memoirs and related papers, 1862-1897.
Sumner, Charles, 1811-1874. Correspondence, 1829-1874
Title:
Charles Sumner correspondence, 1829-1874
Letters to Charles Sumner, lawyer, Republican senator from Massachusetts, and anti-slavery campaigner; with a smaller number of letters from Sumner to others.
ArchivalResource: 33 cartons (43.1 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00232/catalog View
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- Charles Sumner correspondence, 1829-1874.
Typed Copy of Letter from E. B. Washburne, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from E. B. Washburne, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/200192681 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs N. G. Taylor to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs N. G. Taylor to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/179036130 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/200192686 View
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Papers of Paul Leicester Ford
Title:
Papers of Paul Leicester Ford
The majority of the letters in the collection discuss Ford's research, his historical and fiction writing, and the dramatization of his novels. Of interest are a lengthy letter to Richard Watson Gilder re his work for Century magazine and the possibility of a book on Ben Franklin and a letter to S. Weir Mitchell on George Washington's abstention from tobacco. In addition there are routine letters of invitation and regret. There are ten pages of research notes in American history, one page fragments of works on Mason Weems and Benjamin Rush and the "Story of an untold love," and an unsigned criticism of the latter, possibly by Horace Scudder. With these is an 1895 letter from Jacob D. Cox to David Wells discussing a paper on income tax and the Supreme Court by Wells. The collection also contains four proof books of Paul L. Ford & Co., a job printing company in Brooklyn, N.Y., showing specimens of printing available.
ArchivalResource: 25 items.
https://search.lib.virginia.edu/sources/uva_library/items/u2091190 View
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- Ford, Paul Leicester, 1865-1902. Papers : of Paul Leicester Ford, 1888-1905.
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox to Secretary of State Hamilton Fish
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178924806 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs N. G. Taylor to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs N. G. Taylor to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/200192683 View
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1001
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1001
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76784290 View
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- Resource Relation
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C748
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C748
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76783398 View
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Consolidated Military Officer's File of Jacob D Cox, 1864
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of Jacob D Cox, 1864
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120387366 View
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Monroe, James, 1821-1898. Papers 1819-1898.
Title:
Papers 1819-1898.
The papers of James Monroe document the career of this antislavery orator, minister, professor, state legislator, U.S. congressman, and U.S. consul to Rio de Janiero. The correspondence series contains over 5,000 letters received by Monroe, 1841-98. The indexed and calendared correspondence includes abolitionists, politicians and educators. Files relating to Monroe's service as U.S. consul to Rio de Janeiro provide fertile material for the study of Brazilian-American relations, particularly during the American Civil War. Monroe's political service is well documented in his numerous speeches and addresses. The records primarily center on his career as a U.S. congressman, 1871-81. Manuscript sermons document his brief pastoral career ca. 1849. Lectures on political economy and modern history document his teaching career.
ArchivalResource: 12.4 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26566405 View
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- Monroe, James, 1821-1898. Papers 1819-1898.
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Commissioner of Indian Affairs E. S. Parker to Secretary of the Interior J. D. Cox
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/178907416 View
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1865 - Cox, J D - File No. N329
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. N329
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76826583 View
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- Resource Relation
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1041
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1041
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76784405 View
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Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
Title:
Typed Copy of Letter from Hamilton Fish, Department of State, to Secretary of the Interior Jacob D. Cox
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/200192685 View
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1882 - File No. 263 - Cox, J D - Ohio
Title:
1882 - File No. 263 - Cox, J D - Ohio
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/146346814 View
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- Resource Relation
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1080
Title:
1865 - Cox, J D - File No. C1080
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/76784579 View
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Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers.
Title:
Papers. no date.
Letter from J.D. Cox to Hamilton Fish, Secretary of State, accepting invitation to visit.
ArchivalResource: 1 item (1 p.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/10340114 View
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- Cox, Jacob D. (Jacob Dolson), 1828-1900. Papers.
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, District of Columbia, 1865
Title:
Consolidated Military Officer's File of J D Cox, District of Columbia, 1865
DigitalArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/120469274 View
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- Resource Relation
1865 - Cox, J O - File No. C1077
Title:
1865 - Cox, J O - File No. C1077
DigitalArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
Lucas, Robert, 1781-1853. Selected Ohio Governors' papers [microform], 1803-1882.
Title:
Selected Ohio Governors' papers [microform], 1803-1882.
Microfilm copy of nineteen manuscript collections in the Ohio Historical Society's holdings of the Ohio Governors' papers, microfilmed after being damaged in a 1951 fire. Original collections are restricted.
ArchivalResource: 10 microfilm reels ; 35 mm.34 microfilm reels ; 16 mm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41044755 View
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- Resource Relation
- Lucas, Robert, 1781-1853. Selected Ohio Governors' papers [microform], 1803-1882.
Photographic Portrait File
Title:
Photographic Portrait File
ArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
- Photographic Portrait File
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- Constellation Relation
- Acme-Cleveland Corporation.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Allen, Robert.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Allen, William, 1803-1879.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Anderson, Charles, 1814-1895.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Benjamin, Samuel Nicoll, 1839-1886.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bickham, William Dennison, 1827-1894
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carrington family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carrington family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carrington family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Century Company
Chase, Salmon P. (Salmon Portland), 1808-1873.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sb4468
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Chase, Salmon P. (Salmon Portland), 1808-1873.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cincinnati Law School
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cochran, William Cox, 1848-1936.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coggeshall, William Turner, 1824-1867.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cox, Kenyon, 1856-1919.
Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876
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Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dearborn, Frederick M. (Frederick Myers), b. 1876
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel, 1853-1935
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Finney, Charles Grandison, 1792-1875
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fish, Hamilton, 1808-1893.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ford, Paul Leicester, 1865-1902.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Garfield, James A. (James Abram), 1831-1881.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Garrison family.
Grant, Ulysses S. (Ulysses Simpson), 1822-1885,
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Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Grant, Ulysses S. (Ulysses Simpson), 1822-1885,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hassaurek, F. (Friedrich), 1831-1885.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hayes, Rutherford Birchard, 1822-1893
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Janney family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lockwood, Philip Case, 1844-1897
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McMillen, William L.
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
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- Constellation Relation
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, collector.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Monroe, James, 1821-1898
Oberlin College
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6r82418
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alumnusOrAlumnaOf
Jacob Dolson Cox graduated from Oberlin College in either 1850 or 1851.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Oberlin College
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Oberlin College. Archives.
Ohio. General Assembly. Senate
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memberOf
Jacob Dolson Cox served in the Ohio State Senate from 1860 to 1862.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ohio. General Assembly. Senate
Ohio. Governor
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leaderOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was Governor of Ohio from 1866 to 1868.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ohio. Governor
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ohio Infantry. 25th Regt., 1861-1865.
Ohio. Militia
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memberOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was appointed Brigadier General of Ohio Militia in 1860.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ohio. Militia
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Opdycke, Emerson, 1830-1884.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Pierce, Edward Lillie, 1829-1897
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Porter, Fitz-John, 1822-1901
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rhodes, James Ford, 1848-1927
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Schofield, John McAllister, 1831-1906.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Scudder, Horace Elisha, 1838-1902
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Shellenberger, John K., b. 1843?
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Smith, T. F.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Speed, Thomas, 1841-1905.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stanley, David Sloane, 1828-1902.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Steele family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sumner, Charles, 1811-1874
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Swinton, William, 1833-1892.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Thayer, John M. (John Milton), 1820-1906.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Union Party. Ohio.
United States. Army of the Ohio (1861-1865)
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memberOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was part of the command structure of the 23rd Corps.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of the Ohio (1861-1865)
United States. Army of the Potomac. Corps, 9th (1862-1865)
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memberOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was the commander of the Kanawha Division during the Battle of Antietam.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Army of the Potomac. Corps, 9th (1862-1865)
United States. Congress. House
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memberOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was a member of the US House of Representatives from 1877 to 1879.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Congress. House
United States. Dept. of the Interior
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68d3k69
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leaderOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was the Secretary of the Interior from 1869 to 1870.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Dept. of the Interior
University of Cincinnati
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leaderOf
Jacob Dolson Cox was President of the University of Cincinnati from 1885 to 1889.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- University of Cincinnati
Wade, B. F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1800-1878.
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correspondedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wade, B. F. (Benjamin Franklin), 1800-1878.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- William C. Cochran family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wright, George Bohan, 1815-1903
eng
Latn
Citation
- Language
- eng
Abolitionists
Citation
- Subject
- Abolitionists
African Americans
Citation
- Subject
- African Americans
Antietam, Battle of, Md., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- Antietam, Battle of, Md., 1862
Atlanta Campaign, 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Atlanta Campaign, 1864
Atlanta Campaign, 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Atlanta Campaign, 1864
Civil service
Citation
- Subject
- Civil service
Civil War, 1861-1865
Citation
- Subject
- Civil War, 1861-1865
Emigration and immigration
Citation
- Subject
- Emigration and immigration
Franklin, Battle of, Franklin, Tenn., 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Franklin, Battle of, Franklin, Tenn., 1864
Franklin, Battle of, Franklin, Tenn., 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Franklin, Battle of, Franklin, Tenn., 1864
Governor
Citation
- Subject
- Governor
Microscope and microscopy
Citation
- Subject
- Microscope and microscopy
Nashville, Battle of, Nashville, Tenn., 1864
Citation
- Subject
- Nashville, Battle of, Nashville, Tenn., 1864
Police
Citation
- Subject
- Police
Political parties
Citation
- Subject
- Political parties
Politicians
Citation
- Subject
- Politicians
Railroads and state
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads and state
Reconstruction
Citation
- Subject
- Reconstruction
Reconstruction
Citation
- Subject
- Reconstruction
Republican Party
Citation
- Subject
- Republican Party
Sioux Indians
Citation
- Subject
- Sioux Indians
Soldiers
Citation
- Subject
- Soldiers
South Mountain, Battle of, Md., 1862
Citation
- Subject
- South Mountain, Battle of, Md., 1862
Stones River, Battle of, Murfreesboro, Tenn., 1862-1863
Citation
- Subject
- Stones River, Battle of, Murfreesboro, Tenn., 1862-1863
Whig Party (U.S.)
Citation
- Subject
- Whig Party (U.S.)
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Abolitionists
Citation
- Occupation
- Abolitionists
Army officers
Citation
- Occupation
- Army officers
Cabinet officers
Citation
- Occupation
- Cabinet officers
Governors
Citation
- Occupation
- Governors
Lawyers
Citation
- Occupation
- Lawyers
Politicians
Citation
- Occupation
- Politicians
Representatives, U.S. Congress
Citation
- Occupation
- Representatives, U.S. Congress
Soldiers
Citation
- Occupation
- Soldiers
Lenoir County
AssociatedPlace
Work
Jacob Dolson Cox was involved in the Battle of Wyse Fork
Citation
- Place
Cincinnati
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox was the Dean of the Cincinnati Law Schoo from 1881 to 1897. Jacob Dolson Cox was the President of the University of Cincinnati from 1885 to 1889.
Citation
- Place
Oberlin
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox graduated from Oberlin College in either 1850 or 1851.
Citation
- Place
Frederick
AssociatedPlace
Work
Jacob Dolson Cox’s Division took control of Frederick, Maryland during the Maryland Campaign of 1862.
Citation
- Place
Wilmington
AssociatedPlace
Work
Jacob Dolson Cox was involved in the Battle of Wilmington.
Citation
- Place
Nashville
AssociatedPlace
Work
Jacob Dolson Cox was involved in the Battle of Nashville.
Citation
- Place
Columbus
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox served as Ohio State Governor from 1866 to 1868. Jacob Dolson Cox as State Senator from 1860 to 1862. Jacob Dolson Cox was stationed outside Columbus, Ohio at the beginning of the Civil War.
Citation
- Place
Citation
- Place
Montréal
AssociatedPlace
Birth
Jacob Dolson Cox was born on October 4, 1900 when Montreal was part of Lower Canada.
Citation
- Place
Toledo
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox was the president of the Toledo and Wabash Railroad and represented Toledo in the US House or Representatives.
Citation
- Place
New York City
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox moved with is family to as a child.
Citation
- Place
Washington City
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox was Secretary of the Interior from 1869 to 1870 and was a member of the US House of Representatives from 1877 to 1879.
Citation
- Place
Warren
AssociatedPlace
Residence
Jacob Dolson Cox was the superintendent of Warren school system.
Citation
- Place
Antietam
AssociatedPlace
Work
Jacob Dolson Cox was involved in the Battle of Antietam.
Citation
- Place
Franklin
AssociatedPlace
Work
Jacob Dolson Cox was involved in the Battle of Franklin.
Citation
- Place
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 297