• Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop
  Pioneers' Cemetery AssociationPhoenix, AZ
  • Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop

Ivy H. Cox

1/16/2026

0 Comments

 
Picture
Ivy H. Cox, 1825-1898 
Methodist Minister and Judge
 
Buried in City/Loosley Cemetery, Block 6, Lot 10

(
Grave marker photo courtesy of Pioneers’ Cemetery Association, Inc.)


Ivy Henderson Cox was born December 29, 1825, in Dungannon, Scott County, Virginia. He was the son of James Longhollow Cox and Nancy Finney, originally of Russell County, Virginia.
 
Upon graduating from William and Mary College, Ivy Cox was ordained a minister. He then went to Texas where he was eventually elected the presiding elder of the Methodist Episcopal circuit. He married Mary Jane Cook of Alabama on July 5, 1852, in Fayette County, Texas. They had eight children, the first six born in Texas and the last two in California.
 
Notwithstanding that he was a family man approaching the age of forty, Ivy Cox felt it his duty to serve during the Civil War. Accordingly, he became a chaplain in the 8th Texas Infantry (Hobby’s Regiment), C.S.A. The regiment was charged with defending the seacoast installations at Galveston and Port Bolivar. Cox’s military career ended in May 1864 when he took an extended leave and did not return to his regiment.
 
After the war, the Coxes moved to California. By 1877, they were in Florence, Arizona. Shortly thereafter, they came to Phoenix. The federal census of 1880 records Cox as a lawyer but, because he was also a minister, he continued to officiate at weddings. Cox was said to be a pure soul, a lover of justice, but quite tolerant in public matters. He served on County Board of Supervisors from 1879 to 1880 and again in 1895. He also became a judge.  
 
By the time they arrived in Phoenix, most of the Cox children had reached adulthood. Sons Melancthon and William went into the construction business, while Franklin Ivy became an attorney for the Southern Pacific Railroad. The five Cox daughters married into local families. Most of them were still living In the Ivy Cox household in 1880.
 
Judge Cox’s wife Mary Jane died 29 December 1886 and was buried in Loosley Cemetery. Sometime thereafter, Cox went to Quitman, Texas to marry a woman named Ann who survived him.
 
The last years of Judge Cox’s life were spent on the family ranch four miles north of Phoenix, where he engaged in growing fruit and keeping bees. Late in 1898, he was living at the residence of Joseph DuPree Reed. He died there on December 20, 1898, of congestion of the brain and paralysis. He was buried in Loosley Cemetery next to his first wife.
 
© 2026 by Donna L. Carr.  Last revised 14 January 2026.

​If you would like assistance researching our interred, you can find more information on our website. You can contact us at [email protected] at any time. Thank you for your interest to preserve the history of Arizona's pioneers!
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

      Subscribe

    Subscribe to Newsletter

    Categories

    All
    12 Graves Of Christmas
    Architects
    Asian Pacific Islander (Chinese)
    Asian Pacific Islander (Japanese)
    Bad Men
    Bad Women
    Black History
    Civil War
    Farmers
    Forgotten No More
    Hispanic Heritage
    Ill Fated Love
    Immigrant Heritage
    Irish History
    Jewish Heritage
    Judges
    Lawmen
    Miner
    Ministers
    Music
    Native American
    Physicians
    Politicians
    Teachers
    Unusual Occupations
    Veterans
    Woe Is Me


    Additional blog

    BEHIND THE EPITAPH BLOG

We Would Love to Have You Visit Soon!


Hours

TH: 10am - 2pm

Email

[email protected]
  • Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop