Coger triumphed over her birth in slavery

Although born into slavery, Cynthia Coger did not allow oppression to defeat her. In 1807 she was born into bondage in Kentucky, and, when 8 years old, was brought to Palmyra, Mo., by her owner.
She remained in Palmyra more than 30 years and had children with her husband, David Coger, there before he died. A manumission or purchase of freedom allowed her to move to Quincy in 1850, and sources remain about her life here.
After moving to Quincy, Cynthia opened a boardinghouse at her home on Third between Hampshire and Maine. She had joined the Baptist church in Palmyra, and after moving to Quincy became a founding member of the Jersey Street Baptist Church, which became the Eighth and Elm Street Baptist Church. Her second husband was Mr. Lane, a white postmaster from Palmyra who kept his residence in Missouri.
Cynthia passed on her determination and exceptional standards to her children.
Her firstborn son, Ben, was born in 1832 and moved to Sacramento, Calif., at a young age, remaining there the rest of his life. The Quincy Daily Herald printed his obituary in 1880. A letter from a California friend written to his sister in Quincy mourned Ben: "Every carriage in the city was engaged for the services. The church was filled to its utmost capacity; with bankers, lawyers and merchants followed our loved one to his last resting place. You know how much your dear brother was thought of by all classes."
Cynthia's daughter Lucy Ann was born in 1837 and was a teenager when she moved to Quincy in 1853. Within two years she married James Monroe Clark, who had recently moved to Quincy from New Philadelphia. Monroe was a laborer and blacksmith at abolitionist John Van Doorn's riverfront sawmill, as was his brother Simeon Clark. The sawmill doubled as a sanctuary for fugitive slaves fleeing to Northern states and Canada.
The Clark matriarch, Keziah (Cassia) Clark, had known Free Frank McWorter and his family during slavery in Kentucky. She had owned land in New Philadelphia, McWorter's settlement in Pike County, before moving to Quincy with her family in the 1850s. The entire Clark family lived on South Third, a few blocks from the Cogers. Monroe and Lucy Ann Clark moved to Kansas in the 1870s and are buried there.
Ellen Coger was born in Palmyra in 1845, but she lived most of her life in Quincy. She married George Fountain, a barber in the Quincy House at Fourth and Maine. They had one daughter. Ellen died at her daughter Queenie's home in Kewanee.
Cynthia's fourth child, Zenobia, was born in 1848 and named after Queen Zenobia of the Roman colony of Palmyra. Queen Zenobia challenged Rome and declared her independence. Zenobia may have been the first child between Cynthia and Lane, the Palmyra postmaster, but that is unknown. In 1864, as the Civil War raged on, she was enrolled in Oberlin College's literary department, during renowned revivalist preacher Charles G. Finney's tenure as president. Oberlin was the first college in the United States to admit women and black people, beginning in 1835. The school also was known for aiding runaway slaves from nearby Kentucky and resisting the Fugitive Slave Act, which required the return of runaway slaves. Zenobia's fellow student, Willis Brent, came to Oberlin in 1866. Professor Brent was from St. Louis, and his father, Willis Sr., purchased his family's freedom. After graduation, Zenobia and Willis moved back to Quincy and married in 1870, buying a house at 401 South 18th. The Brents are buried in Woodland Cemetery.
Emma Coger was born in 1853 and was Cynthia's first child born in Quincy. She taught seventh grade at Lincoln School by age 19 and was educated in the finest schools. Emma is known for an 1872 court case in which she defied a racist tradition on a Mississippi River steamboat she had boarded in Keokuk, Iowa, heading to Quincy. The ship's captain refused Emma a seat at a table of white women even though she had a first class ticket. A scuffle ensued and Coger was forcibly removed from the table. She sued Northwestern Union Packing Co. after arriving in Quincy, and won a landmark case in the Iowa Supreme Court.
Cynthia Coger lived one block from the square, the site of the 1858 Lincoln-Douglas Debate now known as Washington Park. The crowd spilled into the streets near her home, and Cynthia and her family may have heard the arguments unfold. Less than five years after that debate, Cynthia and her family attended a celebration of Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation at Bethel AME Church. On Jan. 1, 1863, a Grand Jubilee was held among a "meeting of colored citizens." Cynthia's son-in-law Monroe Clark was secretary of the event, and he recorded the historic session.
President E.A. Fulton addressed the crowd and said they were meeting to celebrate the birthday of a nation, the downfall of slavery, and to give honor and thanks to the great friend of the downtrodden and oppressed. The committee resolved "that Abraham Lincoln is the proper man for the times, as the President of the United States and therefore our thanks are tendered to him for his firmness of character as chief executor of the nation, to do right, deal out justice to the oppressed as well as to traitors, and we pray he may live long to enjoy the fruits of his labors, and after death he may be eternally happy, and that his name may be handed down to the latest posterity, the deliverer and savior of his country."
Cynthia Coger had a marked influence on Quincy's development, raising her children to contribute to society. Her death in 1895 brought sadness to many community citizens. The Quincy Daily Herald remembered her as "perhaps the most noted colored woman in Quincy, unusually cultured and refined." Cynthia's funeral took place at her home on Third Street. She is buried in Woodland Cemetery.
Heather Bangert is involved with several local history projects. She is a member of Friends of the Log Cabins, has given tours at Woodland Cemetery and John Wood Mansion and is an archeological field/lab technician.
Sources
"Death of Ben Coger," The Quincy Daily Herald, June 6, 1880.
"Death of Mrs. Coger," The Quincy Daily Whig, March 26, 1895.
"Death of Mrs. Fountain," The Quincy Daily Herald, Sept. 28, 1905.
"Death's Record," The Quincy Daily Journal, May 1, 1899.
"Noted Woman Dead," The Quincy Daily Herald, March 25, 1895.
"Meeting of Colored Citizens," The Quincy Whig, Jan. 10, 1863.
Oberlin General Catalogue, 1833-1908. Oberlin College, 1909.
Quincy city directories 1854-1880.





