BIOGRAPHY OF HARVEY WALKER HARMER, HARRISON CO, 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 II, pg. 541-542 Harrison HON. HARVEY WALKER HARMER. It is a privilege not enjoyed by all men, to have stood in the front rank. of the progressive movements that have, in the past few years, brought the United States to its present position of proud supremacy along the lines of humanitarianism and higher citizenship. It is the justifiable claim of those who love best their native land, that the lamp of liberty lighted by their colonial ancestors so many generations ago still stead- ily illumines the way along the path of real progress, and that no better proof could be afforded than that given by the nation-wide approval of the momentous additions to the immortal Constitution that recent legislation has made ef- fective. To have been a factor and potential influence in legislation at this time, proves true patriotism and marked public efficiency. In this connection attention may be cen- tered on one of West Virginia's distinguished citizens, Hon. Harvey Walker Harmer, a leading member of the bar at Clarksburg, and twice a member of the West Virginia State Senate. Harvey Walker Harmer was born at Shinnston, Harrison County, West Virginia, July 25, 1865, a son of Benjamin Tyson and Margaret (Shepler) Harmer. The first repre- sentative of the Harmer family in America was an English Quaker who came to Pennsylvania with William Penn. During the Revolutionary war, the great-grandfather, Jacob Harmer, and possibly his father, despite the peaceful prin- ciples of their religious belief, served in the Patriot army, in the contingent from Philadelphia. In that city Jacob Harmer (2), the grandfather, was born January 23, 1794, and he was the founder of the family in Winchester, Vir- ginia, where Benjamin Tyson Harmer was born on January 1, 1824. In 1851 he married Margaret Shepler, and in the spring of the following year they came to Shinnston, in what is now West Virginia. Benjamin Tyson Harmer re- sided there until his death, December 4, 1890. He was a wagonmaker and undertaker, a competent, reliable busi- ness man, an active influence in the Methodist Episcopal Church, a faithful Odd Fellow, and a conscientious supporter of the principles of the republican party. For four years he served as president of the County Court. Harvey W. Harmer attended the public schools in his native place and then entered the State Normal school at Fairmont, from which he was graduated in 1889, following which he taught school for some years, in the meanwhile preparing for a course in law at the West Virginia Uni- versity, from which institution he received his degree in 1892. Mr. Harmer immediately entered into practice at Clarksburg, where for many years he has ranked as a leader of the bar. In addition to the distinction won in profes- sional life, he has served in many positions of trust and responsibility, and in public affairs has achieved results that reflect credit and honor on his name. Early in his political life, Mr. Harmer served two years as deputy circuit clerk, for nineteen years was secretary of the Board of Education at Clarksburg, and from 1895 until 1901, was a member of the State Board of Regents of the State Normal schools. In 1894 he was first prom- inently called into public life by his election to the House of Delegates, where he served two years, and in 1900 was elected state senator, serving as such for four years, and re-elected in 1918 for a second term of four years.' When first elected to the Legislature, back in 1894, Senator Harmer was termed the "boy member of the legislature." Nevertheless he made a profound impression at that time by introducing and securing the passage of a number of important measures among which may be named a bill to take politics out of the state university and normal schools, by making the Board of Regents non-partisan. At this session he also introduced a resolution to give women the right to vote. While this early resolution failed to carry, it showed an enlightened understanding and a measure of moral courage that brought him considerable distinction as a pioneer advocate of what, at that time, was an un- popular measure with the majority in West Virginia. That his early opinions had undergone no change was proved when, in the special session of 1920 he introduced in the Senate a resolution to ratify the nineteenth amendment to the Federal Constitution granting suffrage to women. The resolution on a tie vote failed of passage, but when a like resolution passed the House and was reported to the Senate he took the leadership of what proved to be the most memorable fight for the suffrage amendment in all the states. It was by his splendid leadership and thorough knowledge of parliamentary rules that he kept the resolution pending before the Senate for ten days, or until an absent senator was located in California and brought back, and with his vote the resolution was adopted and made it possible for the suffrage or nineteenth amendment to be ratified in time to give the women of all the states the right to vote at the presidential election of 1920. In like manner, the cause of national prohibition has for years engaged his earnest support. In 1903 he voted in the Senate for a state-wide prohibition law, and again in the Senate in 1919, offered the resolution to ratify the eight- eenth amendment, and led the fight for its passage. As a statesman, his record is without a blemish. Senator Harmer acquitted himself we'll in still other capacities. From 1906 to 1907 he served as mayor of Clarksburg and gave the city a fine business administration. He was supervisor of the United States census in 1900 and 1910, and was referee in bankruptcy from 1899 to 1901. During the World war he was a member of the Harrison County local advisory board and was active in every patriotic movement of the time. From his youth he has been a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church and actively identified with its various agencies for good. In 1908 he was lay delegate from West Virginia to the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church held at Baltimore, and for several years past has been a trustee of the West Virginia Wesleyan College at Buckhannon. In 1901 Senator Harmer was married to Miss Nellie Marten, a daughter of Henry C. and Dora (Britner) Marten, residents of Shepherdstown, West Virginia. An ardent republican throughout the entire period of his political life, Senator Harmer has always been faithful to his political obligations and his chosen friends are men whose public careers and private lives have been as irreproachable as his own. Aside from political, professional and social con- nections of a more or less responsible character as usually claims attention from a man of marked importance, Sen- ator Harmer has definitely identified himself with no fraternal organization except the order of Odd Fellows.