BIOGRAPHY OF JOSEPH N. COLTRANE, HARRISON CO, WV ******************************************************************* 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. 515 Harrison JOSEPH NATHANIEL COLTRANE has been a resident of Lum- berport over twenty years. He came into this community soon after arriving in the state, a comparatively obscure young man without capital or influential friends. There followed some years of struggle, when he made little or no progress in the tide of affairs. Persistence and industry had their due reward, and for some years past his place has been that of one of the most substantial business men in Harrison County. Mr. Coltrane is a native of North Carolina and was born on a farm near Ashboro in Randolph County Sep- tember 22, 1870, son of James A. and Flora A. (Henley) Coltrane, natives of the same county. The Coltranes are a very old and numerous family of North Carolina, and the original stock was Quakers and many of the present gen- eration cling to the same faith. James A. Coltrane was a farmer. The mother is still living, as are also her ten children, five sons and five daughters. Joseph Nathaniel Coltrane spent his early life on the farm in North Carolina, attended country schools, and sub- sequently for two years was a student in Guilford College, a noted Quaker School of North Carolina. He worked to pay his expenses while in college, hut after two years ran short of funds and did not realize his ambition to complete a college career. After leaving school he sold nursery stock, and came to West Virginia to sell a patent gate and wire fencing to farmers. Mr. Coltrane came to this state in 1893. Subsequently, while at Lumberport, he met and in 1901 married Miss Anna Laura Mathews, then a student in the Fairmont State Normal School. She died, leaving a son, E. Glenn. Later Mr. Coltrane married Miss Allie Storkey. They have eight children, named Flora A., Joseph Nelson, Nathan, Anna, Ruth, Nelson, Mary and Johnnie. The first turn in his affairs as a struggling business man came when after several failures, he brought in a group of paying gas wells. As a gas producer he has en- joyed exceptional success, and his judgment on all matters connected with gas production in this section of West Virginia is regarded as authoritative. In the course of years Mr. Coltrane has accumulated a number of important business interests. He is a contracting teamster, own- ing an outfit of wagons and horses. He has mercantile and real estate interests, and he owns and manages the Lumberport Hotel. He is a director and officer in sev- eral corporations, being a director in the Lumberport Bank, president of the Shinnston Gas Company, director in the Mound City Gas Company at Lumberport, the Ten Mile Oil and Gas Company, the Hedges Land Company and the Lumberport Land Company. Mr. Coltrane is a republican, and fraternally is affiliated with the Independ- ent Order of Odd Fellows and the Benevolent and Pro- tective Order of Elks.