BIOGRAPHY OF CHARENCE SILAS BATES, MD, HARRISON COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA ********************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. ********************************************************************** Submitted by Valerie Crook (vfcrook@earthlink.net) The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 562 Harrison CLARENCE SILAS BATES, M. D. A native of Harrison County, where he devoted his early years to farming. Doctor Bates after graduating from medical college returned to the same community for the work of his profession, and for upward of twenty years has performed with quiet effi- ciency and ability the arduous round of duties required of a country practitioner. He was born on a farm in Harrison County, July 4, 1874. His great-grandfather was a native of England, and on coming to America settled in Erie County, Pennsylvania. The grandfather of Doctor Bates was Andy Bates, a native of Erie County, Pennsylvania, and an early settler in West Virginia. Notley S. Bates, father of Doctor Bates, was born in Doddridge County, this state, in 1846, and when he was three years of age his mother died and at the age of fourteen he left the home of his father and stepmother to begin life for himself. For several years he worked as a farm hand for a man whose daughter he married. After his marriage he settled on a farm in Harrison County. He served one year in the Union Army during Civil war, was an active republican, and he and his wife were Methodists. Notley S. Bates married Laura Frances Swiger, who was born in Harrison County. She died in 1898, and her husband died at Wilsonburg in 1918. She was a daughter of Jerah and Ruth (Wilson) Swiger, the former a native of Harrison County and the latter a native of Ireland, she having been brought to America when an infant. Clarence Silas Bates was one of a family of twelve chil- dren, ten of whom reached mature years. While on the farm he attended the public schools, also took a course in Wesleyan College at Buckhannon, and he remained a factor on the farm until he was twenty-six. He then entered the Baltimore Medical College, and remained there until graduating M. D. in 1904. In May of that year Doctor Bates located at Lumberport, and has ever since carried the burdens of a general practitioner. He is a member of the Harrison County, West Virginia State and American Medical Associations. Three times he has taken a vacation from his practice in order to keep in touch with the advanced knowledge of his science, and he took one postgraduate course in the Mayo Brothers Clinic at Roches- ter, Minnesota. Doctor Bates is a republican, a Baptist, and is a member of the Masons and Odd Fellows. In 1898 he married Allie A. Coffman, daughter of Jesse F. and Virginia (Harbert) Coffman, of Harrison County. Their two sons are Selman J., and Everett Brice.