McCoy family | American family (2024)

In Hatfields and McCoys

…Anse”) Hatfield (1839–1921), and the McCoys by Randolph (“Rand’l”) McCoy (1839?–1921), each of whom fathered 13 children (some sources claim 16 for McCoy). The families lived on opposite sides of a border stream, the Tug Fork—the McCoys in Pike county, Kentucky, and the Hatfields in Logan county (or Mingo county,…\n

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association with Logan, West Virginia

  • In Logan

    between the Hatfield and McCoy families. The area was the scene of a major disaster in 1972 when coal-mine waste waters burst a makeshift dam on Buffalo Creek and inundated several neighbouring mining communities, killing 118 people. The mining industry, trade, and services are the city’s main economic activities.…\n

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history of Kentucky

  • McCoy family | American family (1)

    In Kentucky: Civil War and its aftermath

    …feud between the Hatfield and McCoy families. As summarized by the historian Thomas D. Clark in The Kentucky Encyclopedia (1992), “Kentucky in 1900 epitomized the conditions of an intensely rural agrarian state with a distinctively regional mind-set.”\n

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The families lived on opposite sides of a border stream, the Tug Fork—the McCoys in Pike county, Kentucky, and the Hatfields in Logan county (or Mingo county,…","publisher":{"name":"Encyclopedia Britannica","@type":"Organization","logo":{"url":"https://corporate.britannica.com/wp-content/themes/eb-corporate/_img/logo.png","@type":"ImageObject"}},"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"article"},"studentArticle":false,"initialLoad":true}

McCoy family

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  • McCoy family | American family (9)

    In Hatfields and McCoys

    …Anse”) Hatfield (1839–1921), and the McCoys by Randolph (“Rand’l”) McCoy (1839?–1921), each of whom fathered 13 children (some sources claim 16 for McCoy). The families lived on opposite sides of a border stream, the Tug Fork—the McCoys in Pike county, Kentucky, and the Hatfields in Logan county (or Mingo county,…

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association with Logan, West Virginia

  • In Logan

    between the Hatfield and McCoy families. The area was the scene of a major disaster in 1972 when coal-mine waste waters burst a makeshift dam on Buffalo Creek and inundated several neighbouring mining communities, killing 118 people. The mining industry, trade, and services are the city’s main economic activities.…

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history of Kentucky

  • McCoy family | American family (10)

    In Kentucky: Civil War and its aftermath

    …feud between the Hatfield and McCoy families. As summarized by the historian Thomas D. Clark in The Kentucky Encyclopedia (1992), “Kentucky in 1900 epitomized the conditions of an intensely rural agrarian state with a distinctively regional mind-set.”

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McCoy family | American family (2024)

FAQs

Who is the McCoy family? ›

Marriage, family, and children
NameNicknameNotes
Randolph McCoyBudkilled during the feud executed by the Hatfields for murdering Ellison Hatfield Sr.
William McCoyBillFate unknown after 1880 census
Trinvilla McCoyTrinnieFate unknown after the birth of her daughter in 1891.
Adelaide McCoydied after the feud
12 more rows

What is the McCoy family clan? ›

The MacCoy Family

Historically clan MacKay were one of the most powerful of the ancient Highland clans. They fought in many battles, both with their neighbouring clans and against the rebelling Jacobite forces, and occupied a large amount of territory in the north of Scotland in the area once known as Strathnaver.

Who are the descendants of the Hatfields and McCoys? ›

Sid Hatfield is just one of many notable Hatfield and McCoy descendants. Others include Henry D. Hatfield, nephew of family patriarch Devil Anse, who served as a senator and governor of West Virginia; 1930s jazz musician Clyde McCoy; and basketball coach Mike D'Antoni.

What caused the feud between the Hatfields and McCoys? ›

The origins of the feud are obscure. Some attribute it to hostilities formed during the American Civil War, in which the McCoys were Unionists and the Hatfields were Confederates, others to Rand'l McCoy's belief that a Hatfield stole one of his hogs in 1878.

Who was the head of the McCoy family? ›

The leader of the McCoys was Randle McCoy. The first known event linking the Hatfields and McCoys was at the end of the Civil War. Devil Anse fought for the Confederate Army for two years. Then he and some of his family members left the army and returned home.

What ethnicity is McCoy? ›

McCoy is a common surname of unrelated Scottish and Irish origin. It was anglicized into the Scottish name from the Irish McGee and McHugh surnames in Irish Mac Aodha. It is an Anglicisation of its Irish form Mac Aodha, meaning son of Aodh (a name of a deity in Irish mythology and an Irish word for "fire").

Is McCoy a rare last name? ›

Nonetheless, the total count of individuals with the Mccoy surname increased from 106,481 in 2000 to 110,744 in 2010, a growth rate of 4.0%. However, the proportion per 100,000 people declined from 39.47 to 37.54, a decrease of 4.89%.

In which state did the McCoy clan live? ›

The Hatfields lived mostly in Logan County (including present Mingo) in West Virginia, and the McCoys lived mostly across the Tug Fork in adjacent Pike County, Kentucky.

When did the McCoys come to America? ›

In the early 1700s, the McCoys started to migrate to America, which was a British Colony. The earliest known ancestor is a Jacobite in Ireland named JOHN McCOY, whom was (according to some sources) the son of Alexander McCoy and Francis Katherine Sutherland, born in 1690, in Sutherland Shire, Scotland.

Are Hatfield and McCoys still feuding? ›

Meet the modern-day descendants of the Hatfield and McCoy families. They're still feuding, but not with guns. The Hatfields own a distillery and the McCoys an entertainment complex. They'll each do whatever they can to make sure the other doesn't succeed.

What disease did the Hatfields and McCoys have? ›

Von Hippel-Lindau disease, which afflicts many family members, can cause tumors in the eyes, ears, pancreas, kidney, brain and spine. Roughly three-fourths of the affected McCoys have pheochromocytomas — tumors of the adrenal gland.

Were the Hatfields richer than the McCoys? ›

The Hatfields were more affluent and had many more political connections than the McCoys. Anse's timbering operation was a source of wealth for his family, while the McCoys were more of a lower-middle-class family.

What finally ended the Hatfield and McCoy feud? ›

In 2000, McCoy cousins Ron and Bo organized the first joint family reunion for the Hatfields and the McCoys. Then, in 2003, the two families officially ended the feud by signing a truce and literally burying the hatchet.

Were the Hatfields and McCoys inbred? ›

Because of rural family dynamics and inbreeding among relatives it seems many of these people, especially the McCoy's may have suffered from a genetic disease, von Hippel-Lindau, that causes tumors on the adrenal glands called pheochromocytoma.

How many died in the Hatfield and McCoy feud? ›

HATFIELD-M'COY FEUD HAS HAD 60 VICTIMS; It Started 48 Years Ago Over a Pig That Swam the Tug River.

Are the Hatfields and McCoys still feuding? ›

These days, the ``feud″ has taken a far more civil tone and all but disappeared, members of both families say. The last time it surfaced was in January 2003. McCoy descendants sued Hatfield descendants over visitation rights to a small cemetery on an Appalachian hillside in eastern Kentucky.

Who won the Hatfields or the McCoys? ›

Floyd Hatfield prevailed when Bill Staton, though Randolph McCoy's nephew, testified in favor of Hatfield, and juror Selkirk McCoy, Randolph's cousin, provided the decisive vote for acquittal. Staton was harassed following the trial, then killed by brothers Sam and Paris McCoy, also nephews of Randolph.

How many McCoys were killed by the Hatfields? ›

His sons and other family members captured Tolbert, Pharmer, and Randolph McCoy Jr. When Ellison died of his wounds, the Hatfields escorted the McCoys back into Kentucky—just across the Tug River from present-day Matewan—tied them to pawpaw bushes, lined up as a firing squad, and executed all three.

What happened to the family on the real McCoys? ›

When the series moved from ABC to CBS for its sixth and final season, some of the continuing characters were dropped. For instance, Luke's wife Kate had died, and his brother Little Luke was packed off to boarding school and was not seen again.

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