This image is the cover for the book Legendary Locals of Coppell, Legendary Locals

Legendary Locals of Coppell, Legendary Locals

Coppell has produced a wealth of personalities that could have leapt from the pages of a novel. The town's early days brought John and Sarah Stringfellow, who helped found the town's oldest church, and Josiah and John Record, a father-and-son duo who were victims of lynching. The coming of the Cottonbelt Railroad created the mystery of town namesake George Coppell. The town was home to farmers like domino-loving Buren Ledbetter and sharecropper W.A. Ottinger. It had its own "Floyd the Barber" (Floyd Harwell), as well as Jo Jackson, the librarian known to most as the "Bird Lady of Coppell." The town has produced a wealth of heroes like Carroll Kirkland, who was killed in World War II, and Jacob Schick, a decorated veteran of the Iraq War. It is also a town that has turned tragedy into triumph through stories like Todd and Tara Storch, who transformed the pain of their daughter Taylor's death into the life-giving charity Taylor's Gift. Together their stories tell the story of Coppell, a place that at its heart will always be a small town.

Shaun M. Jex

Shaun M. Jex is a Coppell resident and a member of the Coppell Historical Society. A member of First United Methodist Church of Coppell and active in a number of ministries, he writes regularly for the church's newsletter on topics ranging from history to contemporary church life and community.

Arcadia Publishing