Marvin C. Goff, who maintains his residence and official headquarters in the
City of Baton Rouge and who is here the division chief in the United States
internal-revenue service, was born at Saltillo, Hardin County, Tennessee, March
27, 1890, the Goff family having long been one of prominence and influence in
that county. Louis Goff, grandfather of the subject of this sketch, passed
virtually his entire life in Decatur County, and was there a substantial
exponent of farm industry, besides having been prominent in the civic affairs of
his community. His wife, whose family name was Kelly, likewise was born in
Decatur County, and there her death occurred when she was well advanced in
years. Their son, Joseph W., who was born at the family homestead near Saltillo,
January 26, 1847, has there continued his residence during the long intervening
years, has been an extensive and successful agriculturist and stock-grower and
is now living virtually retired at Saltillo, as one of the venerable and honored
native sons of Hardin County. He has there been influential in the councils of
the republican party, has served as road commissioner and was for many years a
member of the school board. He was a Union soldier during the last two years of
the Civil war, as a member of an Illinois infantry regiment, and he now
maintains affiliation with the Grand Army of the Republic. He has long been an
active member of the Christian Church, as was also: his wife, whose maiden name
was Dorcas Barber and who passed her entire life in Tennessee, where she was
born in 1857 and where her death occurred in 1898. The first born of the
children was a daughter, Emma, who died at the age of twenty-one years: Olie E.
is a successful farmer near Scottshill, Tennessee; Ida resides at Saint Louis,
Mo.; Raymond L. is engaged in business as a carpenter and builder in Tennessee:
Loran W. is engaged in the automobile business at Saltillo, that state; D. Alton
is a progressive farmer near Scottshill, Tennessee; Marvin C., of this sketch,
was the next in order of birth; Nora is the wife of Ivy Ricketts, and they
reside in Tennessee; and Nelle is the wife of Raymond Smith, a cabinetmaker,
their home likewise being in Tennessee.
After receiving the discipline of
the public schools of Saltillo Marvin C. Goff became a student in the high
school at Sardis, Tennessee, and after leaving this school he entered Bowling
Green Business University, at Bowling Green, Kentucky. In this excellent
institution he was graduated as a member of the class of 1910, and in the same
year he came to Talisheek, Louisiana, and assumed the position of stenographer
and assistant bookkeeper in the office of the Ozone Lumber Company. He was thus
engaged eighteen months, and then became chief clerk of the Long-Bell Lumber
Company at Woodworth. Two and one-half years later he made another advance step
by assuming the position of general cashier and accountant for the Forest Lumber
Company at Oakdale, this state. He retired from this position two years later to
become president and manager of the Goff Motors Company, in the organization of
which he was associated and which he became president at the time of its
incorporation. He continued as the active executive head of this Oakdale concern
until 1921, when he accepted the position of deputy collector of internal
revenue, with headquarters at Lake Charles. There he continued his effective
service in this capacity until his removal to Baton Rouge on the 1st, of August,
1923, where he has since held the responsible office of division chief in the
internal-revenue service. He has supervision of the Baton Rouge division, which
comprises thirty-one of the sixty-four parishes in Louisiana, and in the capital
city his office are in the Federal, or Post Office, Building. He a director in
Oakdale Chamber of Commerce Wall in business there, and is now a member of Baton
Rouge Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Goff has never deviated from the line of
loyal allegiance to the republican party, and W,~. C residing at Oakdale he
served as notary public under appointment by Gov. John M. Parker. He and his
wife hold membership in the Christ Church, and record of his Masonic
affiliations here indicated: Yellow Pine Lodge No. 282, And Free and Accepted
Masons, and Oakdale Chapter No. 71, Royal Arch Masons, both at Oakdale, state;
Trinity Commandery No. 8, Knights Templars, at Alexandria; and El Karubah Temple
of the mystic Shrine, in the City of Shreveport. In the World war period Mr.
Goff, then residing at Oakdale, was the parish publicity manager of all of the
drives in support of the government war loans in Allen Parish, and found other
and many mediums for patriotic service.
October 21, 1913, recorded the
marriage of Mr. Goff and Miss Ethel Masten, daughter of the late Horace G~ and
Alice (Stone) Masten, of Lake Charles, this state, Mr. Masten having been a
substantial lumber manufacturer in that section of Louisiana. Mr. and Mrs. Goff
have two children: Marvin C., Jr., born March 23, 1916, and Vivian Ione, born
July 28, 1918.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, pages 102-103.
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