Jeannette Cox St. Amand Collection, 1900-1968

ArchivalResource

Jeannette Cox St. Amand Collection, 1900-1968

1900-1968

Collection [1900-1968] including correspondence, genealogical notes, notecards, correspondence, notebooks, Colonial Dames material, newspaper clippings, etc.

1.25 Cubic feet, 2125 items

eng, Latn

Related Entities

There are 6 Entities related to this resource.

Episcopal Church. Diocese of East Carolina

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6f825vn (corporateBody)

United Daughters of the Confederacy. Cape Fear Chapter No. 3

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69669s0 (corporateBody)

National Society Colonial Dames XVII Century. Lord Craven Chapter.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hb5zbw (corporateBody)

Daughters of the American Revolution. Stamp Defiance Chapter (Wilmington, N.C.)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w64j4gv3 (corporateBody)

Cox, Venetia, 1892-1979

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65x27zw (person)

Venetia Cox, of Winterville, N.C., was born in 1892. Miss Cox was a missionary music teacher in mainland China between 1917 and 1950. Supported by the Episcopal Church, Miss Cox taught for her first twenty years in China at the American Mission School located in the city of Hankow in Hupei Province. However, in 1937 the Japanese invasion of the country forced the personnel (including Miss Cox) and students of the mission to become wanderers for the next thirteen years. Continually uprooted, she ...

St. Amand, Jeannette C. (Jeannette Cox), 1894-1976

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6575qh3 (person)

Jeannette St. Amand (1894-1976) was born in Pitt County, N.C., to Beriah Thaddeus Cox and Mary Virginia Smith Cox, both Pitt County natives. She attended Greensboro Women's College and graduated in 1916. She married Ashley Tobias St. Amand and resided in Wilmington, N.C. St. Amand was a genealogist and a member of a number of historical and genealogical associations. She was registrar of the North Carolina Colonial Dames of the XVII Century and president of the Lord Craven Chapter. St. Amand ...