The state of Indiana has contributed many intelligent and
enterprising sons to Illinois and among the number may be named Joseph
Coy, the owner of a highly productive farm of one hundred and twenty
acres in Nilwood township. As a soldier for the Union he valiantly
discharged his duty at the time of the Civil war and as a private
citizen he has displayed an ability and energy which have produced
gratifying returns. He was born on a farm in Elkhart county, Indiana,
October 15, 1846, a son of John and Hannah Coy, both of whom were
natives of Pennsylvania.
At an early age Mr. Coy of this review
was left an orphan and had very little opportunity of education, his
principal training being received in the great school of the world. At
the age of fourteen he began working as a farm hand and so continued
until 1864, when he enlisted in Company F, Seventy-fourth Indiana
Volunteers, as a private and was sent to the front, participating in a
number of important engagements during the closing years of the war. He
was honorably mustered out of service at Washington, D. C., in July,
1865, after gaining in the army many lessons that proved of great
practical value to him in after life. He returned to Indiana and resumed
farm work, continuing there until 1867, when he came to Girard township,
Macoupin county, Illinois, and found employment at monthly wages upon a
farm. In 1871, having accumulated sufficient capital, he purchased forty
acres of productive land in Nilwood township and applied himself with
such good judgment that he became the owner of one hundred and twenty
acres, which he has greatly improved, making his place one of the most
productive of its size in this section. He has for many years been
numbered among the active and progressive men of the community.
On the 29th of December, 1871, Mr. Coy was married to Miss Fannie Smith,
of Girard township, a daughter of Elisha and Susan (Eaves) Smith,
natives respectively of Tennessee and Illinois. To this union three
children were born: Della, now Mrs. B. R. Burton, of Hoopeston,
Illinois, and the mother of three children, Lula, who married J. A.
Clark and is now living on the home farm; and Nona, who is at home.
Politically Mr. Coy has from the time of reaching his majority given
his earnest support to the republican party. He has served for
twenty-one years as member of the school board and four years as justice
of the peace. He is a consistent member of the Methodist church, in
which he is now filling the office of steward. He is a man of highly
social disposition and has gained many friends who admire him' for his
sterling qualities. He is a believer in a high moral standard in public
as well as private life and by his integrity and adherence to worthy
ideals has assisted materially in advancing the happiness of those with
whom he is associated. Today he is known as one of the prosperous
agriculturists of this section — a position he earned by many years of
conscientious effort.
Extracted 18 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from History of Macoupin County, Illinois: Biographical and Pictorial, by Charles A. Walker, published in 1911, Volume 2, pages 696-697.
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