James M. Coen Explained

State Senate:Mississippi
Termstart:January 1916
Termend:January 1920
Birth Date:5 September 1849
Birth Place:Copiah County, MS
Residence:Mizpah, Mississippi
Predecessor:Jasper Felix Guynes
Party:Democrat
Death Place:Gallatin, Copiah County, MS
Children:3
District:11th
Successor:James Madison Pannell
Battles:Civil War
Rank:Private
Serviceyears:1861-1864
Branch:Army
Unit:Company G, 24th Mississippi Cavalry Battalion

James M. Coen (September 5, 1849 – April 1934) was a farmer and a Democratic member of the Mississippi State Senate, representing the state's 11th district, from 1916 to 1920.

Biography

James M. Coen was born on September 5, 1849, in Linden, Copiah County, Mississippi.[1] He was a member of the Confederate Army in the Cavalry during the Civil War until he was paroled by the Mississippi government in 1864. After the war ended, he returned to farming. During Reconstruction, he was a member of the Ku Klux Klan. From 1885 to 1891, he was the Justice of the Peace in his district for three terms. In 1915, he was elected to the Mississippi State Senate to represent the state's 11th District, composed of Copiah County, as a Democrat. He served in the term from 1916 to 1920.[2] He died after a long illness in his son Claude's house in Gallatin, near Hazlehurst, in early April 1934. He was one of the last living Civil War veterans in that county. His funeral service was on April 2, and he was buried on April 3.

Personal life

He was a member of the Methodist Church. He married Carrie M. Segrist in 1881. Coen had three children, Claude C. Coen, Herman Coen, and Flossie (Coen) Wyatt, as well as three stepdaughters.

References

  1. Book: Rowland, Dunbar. The Official and Statistical Register of the State of Mississippi. 1917. Department of Archives and History. en.
  2. Web site: Semi-Weekly Journal from McComb, Mississippi on April 3, 1934 · Page 3. 2021-04-17. Newspapers.com. 3 April 1934 . en.