Maloy Books

Cobb, Felda Ray


Tombstone Data

Name:Cobb, Felda Ray
Born:1910
Died:1999
Cemetery:Greenlawn Cemetery — Columbus, Cherokee County, KS
Section: 3

Abstract Data

Felda Cobb - 'Ray' Cobb, of Commerce Oklahoma and formerly of Miami died at 4:30 am on Friday, Aug 27, 1999. He was 89. He was born May 30, 1910, in Ava Missouri, the son of Walter Cobb and Sadie Heatherly Cobb. He worked for Eagle-Picher Company in the hard rock lead and zinc mines, and was the oldest living miner. He also worked as a welder at the Baxter Springs Kansas salvage yard. He married Virginia Pace. She preceded him in death on Aug 25, 1954. He then married Anna Smith Hodges on Apr 23, 1957, in Miami. She survives. Additional survivors include a daughter, Darlene Higginbotham of Springfield Missouri; a son, Paul Cobb of Miami; two step-daughters, Betty Stratton of Miami and Reahonda McCoy of Baxter Springs; a step-son, Mike Smith of Commerce, three brothers, Paul Fred Cobb of Colusa California, Raymond Glen Peck Cobb of Santa Rosa California, and Roy Cobb of Sebastapool California; two sisters, Beulah Whit of Nevada City California and Gertie Norris of Santa Rosa California; eight grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a step-son, Tommy Coulter; two sisters, Ruby McAllister and Lucille Overstreet; and a brother, Loyd Preach Cobb. Burial in the Greenlawn cemetery, Kansas. Guilford-Thomas funeral home of Miami. Pallbearers will be Darren Higginbotham, Brian Dellinger, Mike Stratton, Danny Stratton, Joe Walden, Chris Stratton, and Dudley Stratton.

Miami News Record — Miami, OK

Aug 29 1999 · p.3 · col.3

F. R. Cobb appears in a photo of later years and in center of a photograph of early mining, worked in an Ottawa county Oklahoma mine in 1938. Other miners included ground boss Fred McCarkle, second from right, and Deener Bailey, right, plus two unknown miners. Paul Cobb, son of F. R. Cobb, is also pictured in a photograph, tells about his father, "He drilled all day in the lead and zinc mines. He would put in the dynamite and cut the fuses...at supper he would hear the shots go off...the next day he'd go in and start shoveling." Note: There is much more to the article, and the notation that he was the oldest living miner may not be accurate when checked with many of the other miners..

Miami News Record — Miami, OK

Jan 19 2000 · p. 1B, full page

Book: Greenlawn Cemetery — S J Mahurin

ISBN: 1-892744-90-2