Charles W. Hoffman

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Succeeded byMartin Morris
Preceded byCharles Henry Wharton Meehan
Succeeded byGeorge F. Curtis
Born1829
Charles W. Hoffman
1st Dean of Georgetown University Law Center
In office
1877–1891
Succeeded byMartin Morris
2nd Law Librarian of Congress
In office
1873–1886
Preceded byCharles Henry Wharton Meehan
Succeeded byGeorge F. Curtis
Personal details
Born1829
Died1896(1896-00-00) (aged 66–67)

Charles W. Hoffman (1829[1] - 1896[2]) was a founder of the Georgetown University Law Center and its first dean. Hoffman also served as the second Law Librarian of Congress.[3]

Hoffman is widely viewed as one of the three primary founders of Georgetown's law school alongside Hubley Ashton and Charles James in 1870.[1] A lawyer by trade, Hoffman served as the school's first secretary and treasurer in its early years of operation,[1] and oversaw rapid growth of its initial classes.[4] He also played a role in recruiting sitting Supreme Court Justice Samuel Miller to serve as the school's sole salaried professor in 1873, and he helped found the school's Moot Court in 1875.[4]

In 1877, Georgetown University President Patrick Healy established the Office of the Dean and asked Hoffman to serve in the role.[4] Hoffman accepted and served as the school's first dean until 1891, when he was replaced by long-serving faculty member Martin Morris.[5]

Hoffman also served as a professor of various subjects at Georgetown College both before and after the Civil War.[1]

Law Librarian of Congress

Personal life

References

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