1 Chicchan
Red Magnetic Serpent
Blue Castle of Burning
Turns on a scarlet Star –
Life Force doubles
In the Court of Magic
Our Purpose –
Remembrance and
Elegance of Form
Red
Serpent Magnetic
Weaves thirteen Moons
Into a galactic Fabric .
©Kleomichele Leeds
Minnie M. Cox
Minnie M. (Geddings) Cox (1869–1933) was an American teacher who was the first African-American woman to serve as a postmaster in the United States. She became the center of a national controversy in the early 1900's when local white citizens attempted to force her out of her job. She also co-founded one of the earliest black-owned banks in the state, as well as an insurance company.
Biography
Minnie M. Geddings was born in 1869 to Mary Geddings and William Geddings in Lexington, Mississippi. At the age of 19, she graduated from Fisk University with a teaching degree. She taught school for a time and in 1889 married Wayne W. Cox, then a school principal in Indianola, Mississippi. They were active in the Republican Party.
In 1891, during the administration of President Benjamin Harrison, she was appointed postmaster of Indianola. She was the first African-American woman to hold such a position. Cox lost her job in 1892 under President Grover Cleveland (a Democrat) but was reappointed in 1897 by President William McKinley and continued to serve under President Theodore Roosevelt.
Cox was considered an excellent postmaster. During the Roosevelt administration, however, local white citizens began to agitate to expel African-Americans from good jobs such as the one Cox held. The white supremacist politician James K. Vardaman led a targeted campaign in his newspaper, The Greenwood Commonwealth, to force her resignation. Eventually the citizens of Indianola voted for Cox to resign a year before her commission was due to expire. Cox initially refused to step down, although she let it be known that she would not try for reappointment after her current commission expired.
As threats against Cox escalated and both the mayor and sheriff refused to protect her, she changed her mind and offered her resignation effective Jan. 1, 1903. President Roosevelt refused to accept her resignation and instead closed the Indianola post office, indicating that it would not reopen until Cox could safely resume her duties. The president also ordered the U.S. Attorney General to prosecute those Indianola citizens who had threatened violence against Cox. A few days later, Cox left town over concerns for her own safety.
The situation became a national news story, sparking a debate about "race, states' rights, and federal power".
When Cox's appointment expired in 1904, the Indianola post office reopened with a different postmaster. Cox and her husband returned to Indianola, where they opened the Delta Penny Savings Bank, one of the earliest black-owned banks in the state. They also founded one of the first black-owned insurance companies in the United States to offer whole life insurance, the Mississippi Life Insurance Company. They were strong supporters of black businesses in the state.
After her husband died in 1925, Cox remarried. She and her second husband, George Key Hamilton, moved to Tennessee and later to Rockford, Illinois. She died in 1933.
The Minnie Cox Post Office Building in Indianola.
Honors
In 2008, a post office building in Indianola was named the Minnie Cox Post Office Building "in tribute to all that she accomplished by breaking barriers".
Cox Street and Wayne and Minnie Cox Park in Indianola are both named for Cox and her husband.*
CHICCHAN
Kin 105: Red Magnetic Serpent
I unify in order to survive
Attracting instinct
I seal the store of life force
With the magnetic tone of purpose
I am guided by my own power doubled.
Only when one learns to control one's thought waves will one experience that which is called "abiding in the real."*
*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.
The Sacred Tzolk'in
Anahata Chakra (Silio Plasma)
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