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Edwin Coppock, Barclay's brother, redirects here.

File:Barclay coppock.jpg

Barclay Coppock[1]

File:Edwin coppock.jpg

Edwin Coppock

Barclay Coppock (January 4, 1839 – September 4, 1861)[2] was a follower of John Brown and a Union Army soldier in the American Civil War. Along with his brother Edwin Coppock (June 30, 1835 - December 16, 1859), he participated in the raid on Harpers Ferry. In historic documents their last name was variously spelled "Coppock", "Coppoc", or "Coppac". The Coppock brothers were raised in Springdale, Iowa, where they met Brown while he was raising support for his Kansas Anti-slavery raids. Edwin was hanged in Charlestown, Virginia while Barclay eventually escaped to Canada; his flight was aided by Iowa governor Samuel Kirkwood, who refused to extradite him when Barclay was discovered hiding in Iowa. Edwin Coppock is buried in Hope Cemetery in Salem, Ohio. Barclay later joined the Union Army during the American Civil War and served as a recruiting officer. Barclay was killed in action when his train plunged into a ravine on the Platte River.[3][4] Confederate Raiders had cut through the supports of the train bridge, the incident now called the Platte Bridge Railroad Tragedy.

References[]

  1. Both photos from A topical history of Cedar County, Iowa, Volume 1 (1910) Clarence Ray Aurner, S.J. Clarke Publishing Company
  2. The Palimpsest (November 1928) Vol. 9.
  3. Gibson Lamb Cranmer (1891) History of the upper Ohio Valley, Volume 2 p.270. Madison:Brant & Fuller
  4. John Brown and His Followers in Iowa Midland Monthly Magazine (1894) Vol. 1, pp. 262-267.


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