Major James Lide Coker (January 3, 1837, in Society Hill, South Carolina – June 25, 1918, in Hartsville, South Carolina) was a businessman, merchant, industrialist, Christian philanthropist,[1][2][3] and Civil War veteran, and the founder of Sonoco Products Company and Coker College. He was called "The Major" after his service in the Confederate Army.
Coker was the son of Caleb and Hannah Lide Coker and the great-grandson of Revolutionary War Captains Robert Lide, who moved to South Carolina from Roanoke, Virginia, in 1740, and Thomas Coker, who moved to South Carolina from Brunswick, Virginia, in 1735. Both men fought in Francis Marion's 2nd South Carolina Regiment at Fort Sullivan in 1776 and the Siege of Charleston in 1779 and were awarded tracts of land along the Pee Dee River following the war.
Coker and his descendants' contribution to economic, political, and cultural life in South Carolina is the subject of George Lee Simpson's The Cokers of Carolina: A Social Biography of a Family (UNC Press 1956). Coker's life and accomplishments have been documented in Dr. Will H. Joslin's God, Guts, and Gallantry: The Faith, Courage, and Accomplishments of Major James Lide Coker (Westbow Press 2021).
Education and war service
editEducated at St. David's Academy in Society Hill and The Citadel in Charleston, prior to starting his career in agriculture, Coker attended Harvard University to study heredity, genetics, and the scientific principles of farming. He married Sue Armstrong Stout in 1860, and they were the parents of nine children, six of whom survived childhood: Margaret, James Lide Jr., David, William, Jennie, Charles Westfield, and Susan. According to the 1860 United States census, Coker owned 22 slaves.
Coker served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, and fought for the 6th and 9th South Carolina Regiments at First Manassas, the Battle of Malvern Hill, Second Manassas, the Battle of Harpers Ferry, and Antietam. In October 1863, Coker was wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga, and after a time as a prisoner of war, returned home to spend the rest of his life nursing a shattered hip.[4]
In March 1865, Coker set out with a large box of food supplies for the Confederate forces in Richmond. On his return to Hartsville, he learned that General Sherman's army was in the Pee Dee, but Sherman's troops had already destroyed his plantation, the livestock driven away or requisitioned, and everything of value in their home taken away. Operation Anaconda devastated the local economy.[5]
Business acumen
editCoker's war wounds did not dampen his ambition. He entered into the plantation economy of the day with the stubborn conviction that the South's future hinged on the introduction of scientific principles to farming, coupled with the development of industry.
At the cessation of armed hostilities in April 1865, the Coker family began rebuilding. Although Sherman's army had left no work stock, Coker had cotton seed and seed corn, which he planted with the use of an old mule and a pair of oxen borrowed from an uncle. He planted 60 acres (240,000 m2) of cotton and 40 acres (160,000 m2) of corn, which yielded 25 bales of cotton and 300 bushels of corn. At the prevailing prices, 25 bales of cotton brought $1,700, a small fortune in that time.
Using those funds and others derived from mortgaging some of his land, he founded other businesses which were highly successful,[6] including a cotton and naval trade post in Charleston, the Darlington Manufacturing Company, the Hartsville Cotton Mill, the Hartsville Oil Mill, and the Pedigreed Seed Company. Hartsville, South Carolina, has enjoyed lasting benefits from his decision to build his own railroad spur (at his own expense) when other town merchants wouldn't agree to help fund construction. In 1881, he organized and was elected president of Darlington National Bank, the only bank in the county.
In 1890, Coker and his eldest son, James, began a search for a way to turn Southern pine trees into pulp for papermaking, and three years later, they had perfected a process. Shipping costs for the pulp made this business unprofitable, so Coker purchased his own papermaking equipment. That resulted in the formation of Carolina Fiber Company. With precious few nearby customers for paper, in 1899, Coker organized the Southern Novelty Company, later renamed Sonoco Products Company, to use some of the paper to produce cone-shaped yarn carriers.[7]
Philanthropy and altruism
editCoker was the driving force in the establishment of Welsh Neck High School, which later became Coker College for Women in 1908; he gave the college a $50,000 endowment and an additional $600,000 during his years as president, which have played a large part in ensuring its continued existence. In 1909-1910, he funded construction of Davidson Hall; it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.[8][9] Memorial Hall was built in 1913 and 1916, and added to the National Register in 1989.[8]
Coker served his community as mayor of Hartsville, president of the Pee Dee Historical Society, and a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, where he introduced the first bill for universal public education in South Carolina. As a faithful community servant, Coker also taught the boys' Sunday School at First Baptist Hartsville for thirty-eight years.[10]
Coker was inducted into the South Carolina Business Hall of Fame in 1986.
References
edit- ^ Coker, James (1858). Farm Journal of Major James Lide Coker. Coker family boxes, box 2, The South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.: Major Coker. p. 28.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Coker, James (June 1912). Euterpean. Hartsville, SC: Coker College. p. 50.
- ^ Vivien, Coker (1997). Recollections of the Major: James Lide Coker, 1837-1918. Hartsville, SC: Hartsville Museum. p. 60.
- ^ "The Past, Present, and Future of the Library". Archived from the original on 2007-12-22. Retrieved 2008-01-14.
- ^ James Lide Coker Papers, 1800-1947 - Manuscripts Division - South Caroliniana Library - University Libraries - USC
- ^ * Mims, Edwin (September 1911). "The South Realizing Itself, First Article: Hartsville And Its Lesson". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXII: 14972–14987. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
- ^ "James Lide Coker". Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2008-01-14.
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- ^ "Davidson Hall, Coker College, Darlington County (College Ave., Hartsville)". South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
- ^ Ousley, Mrs. J. F. Recollections of the Major, 1837-1918. op. cit. pp. 41, 60.