William Coffin Coleman Explained

William Coffin Coleman
Birth Date:20 October 1870
Birth Place:Chatham, New York, USA
Death Place:Wichita, Kansas, USA
Death Cause:Acute myocardial infarction
Resting Place:Old Mission Mausoleum, Wichita, Kansas
Education:Emporia State University
Order:25th
Office:Mayor of Wichita, Kansas
Term Start:1923
Term End:1924
Successor:Benjamin Franklin McLean

William Coffin Coleman (May 21, 1870  - November 2, 1957) was a businessman, the American founder of the Coleman Company, a maker of camping equipment, and a politician. He served as the Mayor of Wichita, Kansas, from 1923 to 1924.

Biography

Coleman was born in Chatham, New York, in 1870. His parents moved the family to Labette County, Kansas, in 1871, and in 1881 his father died. William started earning money by selling small goods as a child.

After he got older, he became a salesman, a good entry position for someone with limited education but much energy.[1] While he was selling typewriters in Alabama, Coleman saw a lantern that used gasoline instead of kerosene. He switched his sales to lanterns, believing these would be useful. He began to craft his own lantern, which he marketed as the Coleman Arc Lamp.

In 1901 Coleman married Fanny Sheldon and they moved to Wichita, Kansas. They had two children: Sheldon and Clarence Coleman.

Coleman also developed what he called the G.I. pocket stove, in addition to the gasoline lamp. The business was now called the Coleman Lamp and Stove Company.[1] after two decades in Wichita, Coleman entered politics, joining the Republican Party. He was elected as mayor of Wichita for one two-year term, serving 1923 through 1924.

Coleman died in Wichita, Kansas, on November 2, 1957, from a heart attack.[2] He is buried in Old Mission Mausoleum, Wichita, Kansas.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: William Coffin Coleman . . 2007-07-21 .
  2. News: W.C. Coleman, 87, Stove Maker, Dies. Manufacturer of Utensil Used by G.I.'s Founded Company in Wichita . William Coffin Coleman, maker of gasoline lamps and G.I. pocket stoves known the world over, died of a heart attack today. His age was 87. . . . November 3, 1957 . 2007-07-21 .