Harrison County, West Virginia Biography of Hon. Charles Gordon COFFMAN ************************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: Material may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material, AND permission is obtained from the contributor of the file. These pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organizations. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for non-commercial purposes, MUST obtain the written consent of the contributor. Submitted by Valerie Crook, , March 2000 ************************************************************************** The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 364 HON. CHARLES GORDON COFFMAN, who is engaged in the practice of his profession in the City of Clarksburg, Har- rison County, is not only one of the representative mem- bers of the bar of his native county but also a scion of an old and honored family of this county. He was born on his father's farm in Harrison County, August 30, 1875, and is a son of John Marshall and Cornelia J. (Swiger) Coffman, both of whom likewise were born and reared in this county, where they passed their entire lives, secure in the high regard of all who knew them. The father died at the age of sixty-two and the mother at the age of sixty- eight years, both having been earnest members of the Baptist Church. John Marshall Coffman served as a loyal young soldier of the Union in the Civil war, and in politics he was a stanch supporter of the principles of the republican party. He long held prestige as one of the substantial and progressive agriculturists and stockgrowers of his native county and was influential in community af- fairs. His parents, John G. and Achsah (Boggers) Coff- man, passed their entire lives in Harrison County, the former having been a son of Henry Coffman, who was born and reared at Smithfield, near Uniontown, Pennsyl- vania, where his father settled upon immigrating to Amer- ica from his native Germany. Henry Coffman was a pioneer settler in what is now Harrison County, West Vir- ginia, and contributed his quota to the civic and indus- trial development of this section of the state. Here, about the year 1805, was solemnized his marriage to Miss Eliza- beth Robinson, whose father had served as a major in the Continental line in the war of the Revolution and who became one of the very early settlers in what is now Har- rison County, West Virginia. Mrs. Cornelia J. (Swiger) Coffman was a daughter of Lemuel Swiger, the Swiger family being one of the oldest in Harrison County, where many representatives of the name still reside. Charles G. Coffman, one of a family of four children, early began to assist in the work of the home farm, and that he made good use of the advantages afforded in the public schools of the locality is indicated by the fact that at the age of seventeen years he became a successful teacher in the rural schools. For six years he continued alternately to teach and attend school, and in 1898 he graduated from Salem College with the degree of Bachelor of Science. He defrayed his own expenses while attend- ing this institution, as did he thereafter while completing his course in the law department of the University of West Virginia, from which he received his degree of Bachelor of Laws in 1904. He was soon afterward ad- mitted to the bar of his native state and initiated his pro- fessional career by opening an office at Clarksburg. Here he soon developed a remunerative practice, and here he has continued his successful activities as one of the able and representative members of the Harrison County bar. Mr. Coffman has been active and influential in the local councils and campaign activities of the republican party, and he was its candidate for mayor of Clarksburg in the election of 1906, but was defeated. In 1908 he was elected to the State Senate, in which he served one term and made a record of loyal support of the interests of his constituent district and of wise legislation in gen- eral. From 1904 to 1906 Mr. Coffman was chairman of the republican committee of Harrison County, and from 1916 to 1918, inclusive, he was secretary of the Republican State Central Committee of West Virginia, in which office he showed marked finesse in directing the political forces at his command in the presidential campaign of that year. Mr. Coffman has served continuously since 1905 as a commissioner of chancery for Harrison County, and on the 20th of February, 1922, he was appointed assistant United States District Attorney for the Northern District of West Virginia. He is affiliated with the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Delta Tau Delta college fraternity and the Masonic fraternity, in which last he has received the thirty-second degree of the Scottish Rite and is also a member of the Mystic Shrine. October 14, 1909, Mr. Coffman wedded Miss Alma Earle Haymaker, daughter of Frank B. and Florence G. (Gray) Haymaker, of Harrison County. The two children of this union are Frank Haymaker Coffman and Julia Gray Coff- man. Mr. and Mrs. Coffman are members of the Methodist Church.