Barbour County, West Virginia Biography of Charles A. SINSEL, M. D. This biography was submitted by Valerie Crook, E-mail address: The submitter does not have a connection to the subject of this sketch. This file may be freely copied by individuals and non-profit organizations for their private use. All other rights reserved. Any other use, including publication, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission by electronic, mechanical, or other means requires the written approval of the file's author. This file is part of the WVGenWeb Archives. If you arrived here inside a frame or from a link from somewhere else, our front door is at http://www.usgwarchives.net/wv/wvfiles.htm The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 305-306 CHARLES A. SINSEL, M. D. A thoroughly trained and educated physician and surgeon, Doctor Sinsel rendered his first service with the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, and this connection broadened into a permanent one. Por over thirty years he has been medical examiner of this railroad company at Grafton. In the choice of this line of service there was doubtless exercised some influence from his father, who for many years was a local official of the Baltimore & Ohio. Three Sinsel brothers came to America as British soldiers to fight the colonists in their struggle for independence. They were captured, and eventually found it congenial to their interests to remain in America, where they found useful employment in their trades as millwrights. They settled in Virginia. Elijah, son of one of these soldiers, was a native of Old Virginia and transplanted the family over the mountains to West Virginia, settling near Web- ster, in what is now Taylor County. There he obtained a large tract of land, put some of it into cultivation dur- ing his lifetime, and was buried at the family plot there. John Sinsel, a son of Elijah and grandfather of Doctor Sinsel, likewise spent his life on the homestead near Web- ster and was laid to rest on the farm. His wife was Sarah Curry, a native of Barbour County. Their children were: Harmon, who became a civil engineer; William, Elijah and James, who were farmers; Mrs. Mary Ann Newlon; and Mrs. Williamson. Arthur Sinsel, another of these children, was born on a farm near Pruntytown, Taylor County, in August, 1838, and was educated in the country schools and old Prunty- town College. He then taught school and learned the trade of cabinet-maker and carpenter with an uncle in Prunty- town. When the Civil war came on he was commissioned a lieutenant in the army, but he was soon detailed for civilian service in the bridge-building department of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. This fixed him in the service with which he remained to the close of his life. For many years he was supervisor of buildings, bridges and water stations. He. was killed by being run over by an engine in the Wheeling yards January 25, 1889. While never an applicant for the honors or offices, he was active in republican polities, a member of the State Republican Committee several years and also of the Ex- ecutive Committee. For thirty years he was president of the Board of Education of Grafton District, was a deacon of the Baptist Church and a worker in the Sunday School, and was an ardent Mason, being a past grand high priest of the Royal Arch Chapter of the state. Arthur Sinsel married Hannah B. See, who was born in Randolph County, West Virginia, December 31, 1837, daugh- ter of Charles and Harriet (Bosworth) See. The Bos- worths, an old family of the state, were direct descendants of the famous Warwicks of England. Mrs. Arthur Sinsel, who died in August, 1893, was the mother of eight children, the seven to reach mature years being: Columbia M., who was the wife of the late Judge A. G. Dayton; Miss Abbie T., of Grafton; Dr. Charles Arthur; Ada, wife of the dis- tinguished Judge Ira E. Robinson, former judge of the State Supreme Court of Appeals and now connected with the Department of Justice at Washington; John W., who was United States revenue agent at New York for years and died at Philadelphia in 1919; Miss Mary H., of Graf- ton; and Carrie S., wife of C. Frank Sellers, of Mansfield, Ohio. Charles Arthur Sinsel was born at Pruntytown, Taylor County, June 5, 1864, and may be said to have grown up in the atmosphere of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. While attending school he worked during vacations at civil engi- neering and at the machinist's trade. Following his pub- lic school course at Grafton came two years in West Vir- ginia University and two years in Dennison University at Granville, Ohio. For a year he studied medicine under Dr. William L. Grant at Grafton, and then entered the University of Maryland, at Baltimore, where he was grad- uated in medicine in 1888. His first duties after getting his medical diploma were as Baltimore & Ohio medical examiner for the west end of the Chicago division, including that city, his head- quarters being at Garrett, Indiana. About a year later, on the death of his father, he returned home, and in a short time was inducted into the duties of medical exam- iner for the Monongah division and part of the Charles- ton division of the Baltimore & Ohio, and he has continued faithful and efficient in the discharge of his duties at this post for a third of a century. He is a member of the county and state medical societies, the American Med- ical Association, and the Railway Surgeons Association. Doctor Sinsel is one of West Virginia's prominent Ma- sons. He has taken all the work of the York and Scottish Kites and held offices in all the local bodies; is a K. C. C. H., a member of West Virginia Consistory at Wheeling, is a Past Grand Commander of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar, West Virginia, a life member of the Grand Encampment of the United States, and is inner guard of Osiris Temple of the Mystic Shrine. He is also affiliated with the Odd Fellows and Elks, is a deacon of the Baptist Church of Grafton and teacher of the Philathia Bible Class. He has rather strengthened the ties that bound him by inheritance to the republican party. His first public serv- ice was as school commissioner for four years, then a sim- ilar time as president of the Board of Education. In 1914 he was elected to the House of Delegates for one term, and then elected a member of the State Senate. He entered that body under Lieutenant Governor Goodykoontz, and in the second session appeared as an eleventh hour candidate for president of the Senate, and after an interesting eon- test was elected. He went to the Senate as successor of a democrat who for eight years had represented the Eleventh District composed of Marion, Monongalia and Taylor coun- ties. He gave a studious and impartial attention to the program of legislation before that body, and at the special session was active in behalf of woman's suffrage. Doctor Sinsel was a spectator in the national convention at Chi- cago in 1884 when James G. Blaine was nominated, and he has been a delegate to a number of state, judicial and congressional conventions. He did much to defeat the as- pirations of such well-known democrats as William L. Wil- son and William G. Brown to represent the Second District in Congress. April 4, 1889, Doctor Sinsel married in Taylor County Miss Bertie Creel, daughter of J. W. and Mary (Whites- carver) Creel. She died in February, 1897, the mother of two children: Charles A., Jr., connected with the Cambria Coal Company; and Lila, wife of D. L. Gather, of Fleming- ton. On June 19; 1901, Doctor Sinsel married May David- son, daughter of C. L. and Mary M. (Johnson) Davidson. Doctor and Mrs. Sinsel have twin sons, Rupert Austin and Richard Claudius, aged seventeen, and graduates of the Grafton High School in 1922.