The following article was prepared by the Women’s Civil Club
and pays a tribute to the FINLEY Family, who came to Ironton
by wagon train.
Ironton Tribune, July 25, 1976

Mrs.
Flossie COPNEY, the great-great-granddaughter of a slave owner
from Va., celebrated her 89th birthday recently. It was a
beautiful Thursday afternoon in June that Mrs. COPNEY
reminiscence about the family life to her niece by marriage.
Mrs. COPNEY is the last surviving member of a family of
thirteen great-grandchildren of Josh. Josh, was a horseman for
a slave owner named Mr. FINLEY. Flossie does not remember the
name of her great-grandfather, only that he was called Josh.
In upper Va. lived an Indian Princess whose name was Polly,
who had been stolen and sold as a slave. The Quakers in that
area got her to sue for her freedom. As a result, she was
awarded her freedom, $100.00 in cash and a horse. She took
this and left upper Va. and on to the Plantation of Mr. FINLEY
and went to work in the house where Josh worked and lived. Mr.
FINLEY was successful in getting Josh and Polly to marry. To
this union were born several children, one whose name was
Thomas who was the grandfather of Mrs. COPNEY. Thomas died at
the age of 91.
Mr. FINLEY was the slave owner had been a school teacher
and had taught Josh to read and write and also taught several
of the children of Josh and Polly to read and write. At this
time he was getting on in age and passed away, but before he
died he gave Polly and Josh his land possessions, and also
their freedom. They enjoyed the freedom with the family, but
at the death of Polly and Josh and their children inherited
land and other possessions, there was not happiness any longer
for the children. Neighboring white felt that it was too much
for Negroes to own because of pressure they were forced to
sell.
They took the money and purchased three covered wagons
which made the train. The fact that Josh had been a slave of
Mr. FINLEY, he naturally took is name. It was now that Thomas
FINLEY took his children and his sisters and brothers and left
Va., traveling the mountainous roads by covered wagon and came
to Ironton. They traveled during the warm weather leaving Va.
in the spring of the year, reaching Ironton about Sept, before
the weather became cold. The first night in Ironton, they
camped in a field on South 9th Street between Madison & Quincy
Streets, which is now a Housing Development. They camped just
across the street from the home of a Mrs.. SINKFORD.
Mrs. SINKFORD made the wagon train welcome to draw water
from her well, which they carried across the street to the
camp. The family camped there for a short period of time, then
moving the wagon train onto Vesuvius Furnace where the men
were able to go to work making charcoal.
A young man worked there whose name was John EVANS, whose
father was Indian and mother white, met and later married Lucy
Ann FINLEY of the wagon train. To this union came these
children: Thomas, Addie, Ella, Rebecca, Sophie, Myrtle, Wilma,
Edwin, Blanche, Arthur, Flossie of whom we pay tribute today,
was born June 9, 1887. She was born on the GILRUTH farm below
Hanging Rock and attended her first school in a two-room
building at LaGrange Station. Her brothers and sisters
attended the school for blacks which was located on Jefferson
Street between 8th Street and Depot Square. The school was
integrated in the late 1800’s.