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Museum the New Llano Colony | |||||||
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Lilly Coak Birth: Born about 1874 in Missouri. Family Information:
Married to Nicholas Coak. Description: Pre-Colony History: First joined the colony in 1927-28, but apparently left at some point. The couple returned in 1935, coming from Texas. Home in Colony: Lived in a little house just back of the hotel. In January 1936 it caught fire for the second time in a week, at the peak of the roof, around the chimney, but it was discovered and extinguished before much damage resulted. Job in Colony: In 1935 she was helping out where needed -- dispensing coffee and washing dishes in the hotel dining room, picking wool in the sewing room and working in the laundry. Other Info: One of 42 colonists who signed a petition, dated January 10, 1928 and sent to the governor of the state, which objected to the securing of a new charter being issued to the colony. Among other things, this petition claimed that affairs of the colony had been grossly and intentionally mismanaged and conduct of the management so flagrantly opposed to good morals that a receiver assigned by the District Court was necessary to handle affairs. It alleged that management had: 1. Used misleading propaganda which caused hundreds of people to invest their money in the colony, only to be disillusioned and have to leave with nothing to show for their investment. 2. Reduced the colony to a peon camp - these "peons" being poorly fed, clothed and housed. 3. Advocated "free-love", including promiscuous relations of the sexes and other practices contrary to good morals. 4. Expressed contempt for courts and authorities by taking it upon themselves to punish two boys for stealing from the colony store. 5. Prostituted colony schools by employing nondescript persons as teachers, while issuing fraudulent reports and drawing hundreds of dollars from the Parish School funds in the names of certified teachers and by exploiting child labor. The case was taken all the way to the Supreme Court but eventually was annulled and the plaintiff's demands rejected. Post-Colony History:
In 1930 she and Nicholas were living in Springdale, Arkansas with her daughter Marguerite and he was unemployed. At some point before 1935 they must have gone to
Texas, because in 1935 it was reported in the colony papers that they'd returned to the colony from Texas. Death: Sources: "Llano Colonist": February 25, 1928, May 13, 1933 (Story of Llano), May 20, 1933 (Story of Llano), November 23, 1935, December 7, 1935, January 4, 1936, January 18, 1936; US Census: 1930, 1940; 1947 Joplin, Missouri City Directory
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