
Biographical Sketch of Orville Southerland Cox, Pioneer of 1847
Born into a large New York family in 1814, he learned early that survival required grit and cleverness. After his father’s death, a teenage apprenticeship to a stern‑hearted deacon thrust him into the blacksmith’s forge, where he endured scant clothing, meager meals and relentless labor. Yet his sharp eyes turned chores into lessons, and in secret he fashioned skates from broken nails and even a makeshift gun, honing a resourcefulness that would shape his future.
When the deacon’s absences gave him a chance, he gathered his few belongings and slipped away, following the Susquehanna’s tributaries toward freedom. He rescued a frozen log canoe, bailed out its leaks with a salvaged barrel, and set downriver, paddling alongside a reluctant passenger who helped keep the vessel afloat. Together they navigated the swollen waters, racing toward a waiting packet boat that promised a new start beyond the hardships of his apprenticeship.
Language
en
Duration
~33 minutes (32K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Margaret Willden, Mormon Texts Project Intern (http://mormontextsproject.org)
Release date
2015-10-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1841–1925
Remembered for a family-centered pioneer biography, this Utah writer preserved the story of an early Latter-day Saint blacksmith and frontier settler in clear, personal detail.
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