Alexander Hamilton Coffroth (May 18, 1828 – September 2, 1906) was a
Democratic member of the
U.S. House of Representatives from
Pennsylvania.
Alexander H. Coffroth was born in
Somerset, Pennsylvania. He attended the public schools and Somerset Academy. He published a Democratic paper in Somerset for five years. He studied law in the law office of Hon.
Jeremiah S. Black, was admitted to the bar in February 1851 at Somerset, where he practiced his profession. He was a delegate to several Democratic State conventions, as well as a delegate to the
1860 Democratic National Conventions which assembled in
Charleston, South Carolina, and
Baltimore, Maryland. He served as an assessor of internal revenue in 1867, and was a delegate to the
1872 Democratic National Convention.
Coffroth was elected as a Democrat to the
Thirty-eighth Congress. During his term in the
Thirty-eighth Congress, he supported the passage of the
Thirteenth Amendment, along with some other Democrats, such as
Archibald McAllister. He claimed reelection to the
Thirty-ninth Congress, was seated on February 19, 1866, and served until July 18, 1866, when he was succeeded by
William H. Koontz, who contested the election. He was again elected to the
Forty-sixth Congress. He served as chairman of the
United States House Committee on Invalid Pensions during the Forty-sixth Congress. He was not a candidate for renomination in 1880. He resumed the practice of law in Somerset and died in
Markleton, Pennsylvania, in...
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