Charles W. Hoffman
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Charles W. Hoffman | |
|---|---|
| 1st Dean of Georgetown University Law Center | |
| In office 1877–1891 | |
| Succeeded by | Martin Morris |
| 2nd Law Librarian of Congress | |
| In office 1873–1886 | |
| Preceded by | Charles Henry Wharton Meehan |
| Succeeded by | George F. Curtis |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1829 |
| Died | 1896 (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]