Patrick County Virginia USGenWeb Archives News.....Say Cox Died in Gun Battle September 9, 1922
************************************************
Copyright. All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
http://www.usgwarchives.net/va/vafiles.htm
************************************************
File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
Ron Martin cindyandron@bellsouth.net July 25, 2022, 9:21 pm
The News Leader, Richmond, VA September 9, 1922
Fifteen or Twenty Shots Fired in Encounter With Negroes in
Patrick Near Henry County Line.
(Special to The News Leader.) Danville, Va., Sept. S.The funeral of Ewell Cox,
who was slain by one of three negroes who waylaid the Patrick County man near
Fayerdale was held there Thursday, a large assemblage of relatives, friends, and
and acquaintances attending the obseques. The burial was near the home. Cox
leaves a widow, formerly a Miss Turner, and one daughter. It is estimated that
his estate is worth $75,000. Officers of Henry and Patriek county have failed so
far to apprehend the two negroes, who fled from the scene of the ambush after
Cox had been shot and Cox had killed General Lee Scott. Harvey Smith is named
as one of the alleged fugitives. The authorities do not know who the man is.
Further details of the shooting reveal a more or less protracted gun battle
which between fifteen and twenty shots were fired. Cox had spent the night with
J. A. Adams and on the morning of the shooting left Adams' home accompanied by
Edgar Vaughan. They walked about 250 yards to a point where the road leads at
right angles into the Henry County road, only fifty yards from the Henry County
line. Here the two men found an automobile standing by the roadside occupied by
the three negroes, who appeared to open fire on them without warning. This much
was told by Cox on his way to the Martinsville Hospital where he died Wednesday.
Persons living in the vicinity heard as many as twenty shots fired. Mr. Vaughan
has not been seen since the shooting, it is reported, and it is believed that he
was wounded. The officers found everything untouched when they reached the
scene.
General Lee was seated at the steering wheel of his car with a gaping wound in
his head and marks in the road showed where Cox had fallen and bled.
There seems no further doubt that the killing of Cox was engineered, for Cox on
the preceding Saturday had shot and wounded Scott's brother.
This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/vafiles/
File size: 2.6 Kb