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V

irginia

C

apitol

C

onnections

, W

inter

2017

26

In Memoriam

In September of 2013, I was asked to write a tribute to my friend

H. Selwyn Smith upon his death. I had become friends with Selwyn

when he served in the Senate of Virginia, representing the Manassas

area, from 1972 to 1976. Prior to his election to the Senate, he

had been an army officer in World War II, and Commonwealth’s

Attorney for Prince William County. After serving in the Senate,

Selwyn was appointed by Governor Mills Godwin to be the first

Secretary of Public Safety and then the General Assembly elected

him a Circuit Court Judge for the 31st Judicial Circuit.

In preparing Selwyn’s tribute, I called upon another longtime

friend in Manassas for any words he would like to add. Superficially,

this might have appeared to be a strange thing to do, given the fact

that the friend I was calling was Chuck Colgan, the person who

ran against and defeated Selwyn in the Democratic primary for the

Senate seat. However, it was not at all strange to me because I knew

them both.

Sometime between Selwyn’s defeat and Chuck’s swearing-in,

Selwyn called me to ask that I help Chuck learn his way around the

Capitol and Virginia government. How many times does a defeated

incumbent ask a friend to help the person who just defeated him;

and how often does a successful challenger take advice from his

defeated foe and seek go on to ask for help from his opponent’s

friend?

Both Selwyn and Chuck were World War II veterans; their

service during the war and their public service afterward are why

their generation so richly deserves the title “Greatest Generation.”

They both returned home, started families, worked hard and got

involved in their community. They were elected to public office,

not to have a political career or to become well-known or to even

promote any partisan agenda, but to do what they could to provide

a government worthy of what they had risked their lives to protect.

Selwyn helped Chuck become an effective legislator; when

a judgeship on the Circuit Court for the Manassas area became

available, Chuck nominated Selwyn for it and worked tirelessly to

have him elected to it.

The relationship between Chuck Colgan and Selwyn Smith

exemplified what Chuck was. Not only did he not have any enemies,

he was completely incapable of even

having any adversaries. He saw labels

as differences that just didn’t matter.

Chuck’s relationship with Selwyn Smith

was just like his relationship with his

Republican colleagues in the Senate;

whether he was a member or the majority

party or they were the majority party; he

treated them with respect and they treated him the same way. While

he never wavered from being a loyal Democrat, he boldly went his

own way from his party’s positions whenever he believed he needed

to do so.

Chuck Colgan epitomizes the greatness of our representative

democracy. An orphan raised on a modest farm by his grandparents,

he joined the military upon graduating from high school and went

off to war.While in the service he learned a trade, aircraft mechanics.

He returned home, went to work, started and raised a family, learned

to be a pilot, took the risk of starting his own business that became

enormously successful, served in local office and then represented

his community in the Senate. Unlike most Senators, Chuck did

not hold an advanced academic degree; he proudly claimed the

distinction of being the only licensed aircraft mechanic to ever serve

in the General Assembly. In so many areas, especially transportation,

education and finance, he learned from others and taught himself so

much more than so many of his colleagues who spent decades in

classrooms and on the most prestigious campuses; and to their credit

many of his colleagues with impressive academic credentials would

readily agree with that.

Our Commonwealth was made greater because Chuck Colgan

served us in our Senate for forty years— longer than anyone else,

ever. He did not need political office to enhance his career or financial

status; in fact his business and financial wealth were adversely

impacted because of his public service. Our most profound wish

is that his example would be a beacon for others to try to emulate.

When I asked Chuck for words of tribute to Selwyn, he said

Selwyn “was truly one of our community’s finest sons,” and, “I never

met a finer man.” Chuck, my friend, it takes one to know one.

Charles J. Colgan

By bernie Henderson

Photo by Delegate Rich Anderson

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