Source: History of Boone County, Indiana, by Hon. L.M. Crist, 1914.
BEN F. COOMBS The biographies of successful men are instructive
as guides and
incentives to those whose careers are yet to be achieved. The
examples they furnish of
patient purpose and consecutive endeavor strongly illustrate what
is in the power of each
to accomplish, if he is willing to press forward in the face of
all opposition, refusing to be
downed by untoward circumstances, thus making stepping-stones
of what some would
find to be insurmountable stumbling blocks. The gentleman whose
life history is
herewith, we hope, accurately and succinctly set forth, is a conspicuous
example of one
who has lived to good purpose and achieved a definite degree of
success in the special
spheres to which his talents have been devoted. Mr. Coombs has
for many years been one
of the best known and most enterprising business men of Lebanon
and is one of the
leading lumbermen in this section of the state. He is a scion
of one of the sterling pioneer
families of Boone county and here he has been content to spend
his life.
Mr. Coombs was born in Lebanon, Indiana, April 10, 1861. He
is a son of George and
Lydia A. (DeBois) Coombs, both natives of Union county, Indiana,
where they grew to
maturity, were educated and married, and remained there until
in 1851, when they
removed to Lebanon where they established the future home of the
family. George
Coombs devoted the earlier years of his life to the mercantile
business, maintaining a
store in Lebanon for some time, but later took up farming which
he followed until his
death June 10, 1873. His widow survived nearly forty years, reaching
an advanced age,
dying January 20, 1912. Both the Coombs and DeBois families came
originally from
New Jersey.
Ben F. Coombs spent his boyhood days partly in town and partly
on the farm and he
received his early education in the common schools, including
the Lebanon high school.
When eighteen years old he began clerking in the Lebanon National
Bank, where he
remained six years, giving his employers eminent satisfaction.
He then launched in the
merchandise business in Lebanon, which he followed six years with
ever-increasing
success, building up a large trade with the city and surrounding
country by reason of his
honesty and courteous dealings. He kept a retail shoe store, one
of the largest in this
section of the state. In 1891 he became connected with the Pennell-Coombs
Lumber
Company, with yards at Lebanon, Jamestown, Advance, Colfax, Shelbyville
and
Fairland, all doing a large business, also extensive planing mills,
sash and door factories,
where a large number of men are employed and which are equipped
with modern
machinery, so that high-grade and superior work is turned out
promptly, their products
finding a very ready market over a vast territory, which is constantly
growing, owing,
principally, to the able management and wise foresight of Mr.
Coombs. Fine grades of
finishing, dressed lumber and rough building lumber, in fact,
all kinds of building
material is handled, also coal of all kinds. Their business at
all the above named yards is
rapidly increasing. Mr. Coombs is also a director in the First
National Bank of Lebanon,
also the Citizens Trust Company of Lebanon, the Campbell, Smith
& Ritchie Company,
of Lebanon, the Bank of Advance, is vice-president of the Indestructable
Wheel
Company. He is a heavy stockholder in all the above named concerns
and is interested in
the Oak Hill Cemetery Company and various other business enterprises,
in all of which
his judicious and able counsel makes for success. He has been
very successful in a
financial way and is one of the leading and most substantial men
of affairs of Boone
county and is regarded as an unassuming, straightforward, trustworthy
man of broad and
progressive ideas.
Mr. Coombs was twice married, first, December 18, 1883, to
Mellie Lane, a daughter of
Levi and Pherbia (Hayes) Lane, of Lebanon, and to this union three
children were born,
John L., deceased, Florence M. and Esther A. The wife and mother
was called to her
eternal rest August 19, 1897. Mr. Coombs was again married June
5, 1901, to Ethel
Campbell, a daughter of George W. and Alice C. (Page) Campbell,
one of the prominent
families of Lebanon.
Mr. Coombs is a Republican and since attaining his majority
has been very faithful in his
support of the party, active in political and public affairs and
influential in his county and
city. He has served as a member of the Republican County Executive
Committee and for
some time was a member of the County Jury Commission, and has
been a frequent
delegate to county, district and state conventions. Fraternally,
he is a Mason, a member of
the Chapter, Commandery and the Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles
of the Mystic Shrine.
He also belongs to the Knights of Pythias. He and his family are
members of the
Presbyterian church, in which he is a ruling elder and active
in all church and Sunday
school work. The family is prominent in the best social life of
Lebanon and their
beautiful home on East Washington street is known for its hospitality.
CAMPBELL COOMBS DEBOIS HAYES LANE PAGE
Submitted by Amy K Davis