Norman Cox 4-H Scholarship
Scholarship must be or have been a Lee County 4-H member: a graduating high school senior, freshman, or sophomore in college during year of application who is accepted to an accredited 2 or 4 year college or university in Florida or Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in Georgia. The applicant must have been a member of the Florida 4-H program for at least one year and have a need for financial assistance.
This Scholarship recipient must be or have been a Lee County 4-H member: a graduating high school senior, freshman, or sophomore in college during year of application who is accepted to an accredited 2 or 4 year college or university in Florida or Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in Georgia. The applicant must have been a member of the Florida 4-H program for at least one year and have a need for financial assistance.
Norman Cox was one of the most successful gladiolus growers in the Fort Myers area as founder and first president of the Florida Gladiolus Brokers Association, and president of Gulf Coast Farms. A native of Evansville, Indiana, Cox began in the flower business in 1931 as a florist supplies salesman. Ten years later, he came to Fort Myers with his wife and two small children, put all their savings as a down payment on a piece of land just south of Pine Island Road along Matlacha Pass in North Fort Myers, and set to work manually clearing the land for a gladiolus farm. Harvesting his first crop in 1945, Norman and his family built a successful business harvesting 18 million bulbs annually.