Attention: Partner (Anna Blachford) is 32 years younger.
(1) He is married to Rebecca Upjohn.
They got married on February 1, 1789 at St Martin le Grand Devizes Wiltshire England, he was 24 years old.
They got married in the year 1821 at New South Wales, Australia, he was 56 years old. They got married on January 23, 1821 at St. Mathews Anglican Church, Windsor, New South Wales, Australia, he was 56 years old.Child(ren):
(2) He is married to Anna Blachford.
They got married on January 23, 1821 at Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, he was 56 years old.
Child(ren):
Reference:http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/cox-william-1934
and educated at the local grammar school. He later moved to Devizes, Wiltshire, where he married Rebecca Upjohn of Bristol. He joined the army in 1797 and was commissioned a lieutenant in the New South Wales Corps; next year he was appointed paymaster. In 1799, accompanied by his wife and four of his six small sons, he sailed for New South Wales in the Minerva by way of Cork, where the ship picked up a consignment of Irish convicts who had taken part in the rebellion the previous year. He was put in charge of them as well as his detachment of the corps. Also on board were four political exiles, among them the redoubtable 'General' Joseph Holt, with whom Cox became very closely associated until Holt was sent to Norfolk Island for his suspected part in the convict rebellion in 1804.
m John Macarthur whom he had succeeded as paymaster, several adjoining farms and much stock. He overstrained his credit and in 1803 facing a deficiency of £7900 in his regimental accounts he was suspended from office. The sum of £2000 was secured, and to pay the remainder his estate was assigned to trustees and sold for the benefit of his creditors, including the army agents. By 1806 they had been paid in full, but by then Cox had been ordered to England under arrest 'to answer such charges as may be brought against him'. He sailed in February 1807 but appears never to have been brought to trial. In 1809 he resigned his commission and devoted the rest of his life to civilian pursuits. Through this enforced absence he was away from the colony during the William Bligh rebellion, and was never called upon to reveal where his sympathies lay; however, his wife and son signed an address of loyalty to Bligh organized by the settlers on the Hawkesbury, where Cox had gone to live after the sale of Brush Farm, and during the King period had been strongly criticized by Macarthur and the corps.24)" href="http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/macquarie-lachlan-2419">Lachlan Macquarie made him a magistrate at the Hawkesbury, much to the satisfaction of the local residents. There he earned the reputation of being more humane both as an employer and as a magistrate than many of his contemporaries. His freely issued leave passes, known as 'Captain Cox's Liberties' later incensed Commissioner John Thomas Bigge. Cox took government contracts for erecting gaols, schools and other buildings in the Windsor district, several of which still stand in good repair, the best known being the court-house built in 1820 to the plans of Francis Greenway. After the successful crossing of the Blue Mountains, Macquarie commissioned Cox in July 1814 to supervise the making of a road, following as far as possible the route surveyed by George Evans. The thirty convicts in his working party were chosen because they looked capable of hard work, and their reward was to be their freedom. They made 101 miles (163 km) of road through rugged mountain country, building over a dozen bridges and splitting hundreds of posts and rails in six months without serious accident or loss of life. Macquarie, after travelling over the road, praised Cox highly and named the steep descent down Mount York and the river at its foot after him. In 1888 the journal Cox kept while making the road to the interior was published in Sydney under the title of A Narrative of Proceedings of William Cox, Esq., of Clarendon … in the Years 1814 & 1815. he called Hereford. Although neither he nor his sons made it their home, they ran sheep there for some time. About 1810 they had taken up land in the Mulgoa valley where three of his sons lived for many years. Later in the Mudgee district his sons and grandsons formed studs from William's flocks which became famous for the fine quality of their wool. His large estate at Clarendon near Windsor had all the appearance of a self-contained village. Over fifty convict servants acted as smiths, tanners, harness makers, wool sorters, weavers, butchers, tailors and herdsmen. Cox had steadily improved his flocks, which Commissioner Bigge described in 1820 as among the six best in the colony. He explored the source of the Lachlan River and organized provisions for John Oxley's expedition. married again. There were three sons and a daughter by this marriage. He was the first president of the Windsor Benevolent Society, chairman of the local Macquarie Memorial fund, and a vice-president of the Agricultural Society. Politically he was always a radical, signing many petitions for such reforms as representative government, repeal of taxes, and trial by jury, being 'firmly of the opinion' that 'Respectable Emancipists' would be worthy jurors. In 1824 Brisbane submitted his name for the proposed new Legislative Council, but he was not appointed. He died on 15 March 1837, and was buried, with his first wife, at St Matthew's, Windsor. A window to his memory was erected in St Andrew's Cathedral by the sons of his first marriage.
Web content link:http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/cox-william-1934William Cox at the ADB (Australian Dictionary of Biography)
William Cox | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(1) 1789 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rebecca Upjohn | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(2) 1821 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Anna Blachford |
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=62890030&pid=7773
William CoxGender: MaleBirth: Dec 19 1764 - King St. Wimborne, Dorset, England UKOccupation: military officer, roadmaker and builderMarriage: Spouse: Anna Cox (born Blachford) - Jan 23 1821 - St. Mathews Anglican Church, Windsor, New South Wales, AustraliaDeath: Mar 15 1837 - Fairfield, Windsor, New South Wales, AustraliaBurial: St Matthew's Church, Windsor, Cumberland, NSW, AustraliaFather: <a>Robert Cox</a>Mother: <a>Jane Cox (born Harvey)</a>Wives: <a>Rebecca Cox (born Upjohn), free "Minerva" 1799</a>, <a>Anna Cox (born Blachford)</a>Children: <a>William Cox, free "Experiment" 1804 + "Wyndham" 1814</a>, <a>James Cox, Free "Experiment" 1804</a>, <a>Charles Unknown</a>, <a>George Cox, of 'Winbourn', Mulgoa - Free "Minerva" 1799</a>, <a>Henry Cox, Free "Minerva" 1799</a>, <a>Frederick Cox, infant</a>, <a>Frances Anna Maria (born Cox), infant</a>, <a>Edward Cox</a>, <a>Edgar Cox</a>, <a>Thomas Cox</a>, <a>Alfred Cox</a>, <a>Anna Clarendon Cox</a>Siblings: <a>Jane Cox</a>, <a>Robert Harvey Cox</a>, <a>Anne Cox</a>