Matthew Edmond McCoy

Matthew Edmond McCoy (2 June 1868 – December 1929) served as Magistrate of the British Overseas Territory of Pitcairn Island in 1909. He was the son of James Russell McCoy and Eliza Coffin Palmer Young, and was the grandson of Matthew McCoy. He was one of the last people on the island with the surname 'McCoy'; most people with this name had emigrated to Norfolk Island, New Zealand or Australia, and the family produced a lot of daughters. McCoy himself had 3 children by 3 women, he had two sons who took the surnames 'Christian' and 'Young'.[1]

Ancestry

gollark: Examples do not and cannot demonstrate some sort of general principle, particularly a more abstract one.
gollark: Again, some examples of things needing some sort of balance DO NOT imply it is good or generally necessary.
gollark: This is just an example of "you sometimes need a quantity of something which falls in some interval", not a general proof.
gollark: That seems like just "it's bad because it's something you don't consent to" and also "it's unpleasant", which is I think what we said.
gollark: The dictionary will probably define it recursively or in a somewhat unsatisfying way.

References

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