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- [S3021] USGenWeb Archives- Mingo County.
Joseph P. Hatfield (1) fact
20250712GHLn-
20250712GHLn- http://files.usgwarchives.net/wv/mingo/bios/h314-002.txt
Mingo County, West Virginia Biography of Joseph P. HATFIELD
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Submitted by Valerie Crook, , March 1999
The History of West Virginia, Old and New
Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc.,
Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 92-93
JOSEPH P. HATFIELD is giving characteristically efficient
service as clerk of the Circuit Court for Mingo County, and
is one of the popular citizens of Williamson, the county
seat. He was born at Meador, this county, July 17, 1888,
and is a son of Floyd and Esther (Staten) Hatfield, the
former of whom was born on Guyon River, near the present
site of Gilbert, this county, then a part of Logan County,
Virginia, September 4, 1846, and the latter of whom was
born where the Village of Sprigg, this county, is now estab-
lished, the year of her nativity having been 1851. John
Hatfield, father of Floyd, was a representative of a family
founded in Virginia in the Colonial era, and upon coming
to what is now West Virginia in the pioneer days the
abundant supply of wild game led him to make permanent
location, he having been a nimrod of marked skill and great
enthusiasm, and his son Floyd likewise having become a
crack shot. Floyd Hatfield gave two years of loyal service
as a gallant young soldier of the Confederacy in the Civil
war, and his active career has been one of close association
with farm industry, both he and his wife being now vener-
able and honored pioneer citizens of Mingo County and
both having long been zealous members of the Christian
Church, in which he has held various official positions. His
political allegiance is given to the democratic party. Of
their eleven children nine are living, and of the number the
subject of this sketch was the ninth in order of birth.
The public schools of his native county afforded Joseph
P. Hatfield his early education, and that he made good
use of his advantages is shown by the fact that when eight-
een years of age he became a successful teacher in the
rural schools. By his pedagogic service he earned the funds
that enabled him to complete a course in the Concord State
Normal School at Athens, in which he was graduated as a
member of the class of 1916. He taught seven years in the
rural schools of Mingo County, served one year as assistant
principal of the Iaeger High School, was assistant prin-
cipal of the Matewan High School one year, and for one
year served as supervisor of the schools of Lee District. In
1920 he was elected circuit clerk of the county, on the
democratic ticket, and his able executive service has fully
justified his election. His brother Alexander, formerly a
popular teacher, is now his deputy in the office of circuit
clerk. The sister Mary is the wife of Toler Sipple, of Red
Jacket, this state. Six of the children of the family at-
tended the Concord Normal School.
Mr. Hatfield is affiliated with the Masonic Blue Lodge at
Thacker, Lodge of Perfection No. 4, Scottish Rite, in the
City of Huntington, where also he is a member of the
Knights of the Rose Croix, he having received the thirty-
second degree of the Scottish Rite in the Consistory at
Wheeling, and his maximum York Rite affiliation is with
the Commandery of Knights Templars. He is an active
member of the Christian Church and his wife of the Baptist
Church.
On the 12th of June, 1917, was solemnized the marriage
of Mr. Hatfield and Miss Elizabeth Adair, daughter of
Harvey and Nancy Adair, of Panther, McDowell County.
Mrs. Hatfield and her husband were fellow students at the
Concord Normal School, and, like him, she taught school to
pay tlie expenses of her course in this institution, she having
been for eleven years a successful and popular teacher in
the public schools. Mr. and Mrs. Hatfield have one son,
William Adair.
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