December 28, 2012
Longtime public servant Phyllis Gatson retiring
Chris Dorst
Flowers adorn the desk of Kanawha County Assessor Phyllis Gatson, who is retiring after a long career in public service.
Chris Dorst
To mark her retirement, a magistrate courtroom has been named in Gatson's honor.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Phyllis Gatson, one of Kanawha County's most beloved elected officials, is retiring after more than 35 years of public service.

Gatson, who served as a Kanawha County magistrate for 18 years and as county assessor since 1995, will see her last day in office on Monday.

"She is an unbelievable person," said Kanawha County Commission President Kent Carper. "She absolutely cannot be replaced."

Gatson, 84, got her first job at McCrory's Department Store at age 16, in a time when it was not common for women to work outside the home. "I always wanted to work," the longtime public servant recalled. "I don't know any better."

A product of a politically conscious family, Gatson was encouraged to enter politics, helping organize the Kanawha County chapter of the Federation of Democratic Women in 1971. She was elected to the office of Kanawha County magistrate in 1976.

She held the position for 18 years, 11 of them as chief magistrate. She was president of the West Virginia Magistrate's Association from 1983 to 1987.

"Magistrate court was exciting all the time," Gatson remembered. "You never knew what you were going to get, or when you were going to get it."

Friends and family say Gatson has always led by example, and is known for her compassion. A former jail inmate never forgot that Gatson sent him to jail, but then fed his family while he was incarcerated.

"I couldn't stand to think that a child was going hungry because their dad was in jail," Gatson said. "I've always liked helping people. I didn't think it was all about putting people in jail. I liked to try to keep them out of jail."

Gatson's time as a magistrate is well remembered by courthouse staff. At a retirement party on Dec. 11, Chief Circuit Judge Duke Bloom dedicated a magistrate courtroom in Gatson's name.

"I think Phyllis embodies anything anyone could want in a public servant," said Bloom, adding words like "hard-working," "dedicated" and "conscientious" to her attributes.

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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