Richard Neal Coffin

richard coffin
Falmouth - Richard Neal Coffin, 90, died November 4, 2019 at home with his wife Rose by his side. Born in Boer's Head, England in the Spring of 1929, to the former Ruth Phillips and Robert Peter Tristam Coffin. Richard remembered living at the age of four, in upstate New York, at Wells College. He was later moved to Brunswick, Maine, where he attended local schools, then Fryeburg Academy and graduated from the Choate School in Wallingford, CT. He graduated from Bowdoin College in 1952, then attended Harvard College, where he received a Master's degree in English in 1953. He was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1953, where he served two years in the Army of occupation in Germany. After his discharge, he enrolled in Chapel Hill, NC, then transferred to Boston University, where he did his PHD dissertation of the saga of Beowulf. He taught at Curry College in Milton, MA, then Tufts College, University of Maine, Orono, for a year, and finally the school that became the University of Southern Maine, where he was awarded tenure and taught for 30 years. In the summer of 1962, he received a foundation grant where he went to Laos and compiled a Laotian phrase book for Army officers. In the summer of 1963, with another grant, he went to Vietnam and he made a phrase book in the Vietnamese language for Army officers. In 1964, posing as a tourist and still enrolled in the Army Reserves, he searched temples in Cambodia for weapons caches. Later he would go to Mexico in the summers, sometimes with his friends Bryant Jones and Peter Holmes and Robert Whitson. In 1982, he went to Nicaragua, with his friend Peter Holmes and in later years he studied film making in Los Angeles and made films with his friend Peter Holmes to put on public access TV. In 1965, he married his first wife Lou Coffin in Cambridge, MA. On April 11, 2004, he married Rose Mary McDermott in 2004 in Sedona, AZ. He is survived by his wife, Rose; his nieces, Alison Coffin of Brunswick, Suzanne Coffin of Haverhill, MA, Elena Wescott of Reading, MA and her son Charles; his nephew, Nathanial Coffin of Brunswick, Geoffrey Coffin of Intervale, NH; his grand-nieces, Emily Daigle and husband Michael and their sons, William and Sam, Katie Sparks and her husband Evan of Berkley, CA; his great-grandniece, Charlotte Sparks; his sister-in-law, June Coffin of Brunswick; his cousins, Arlene Lay of St. Augustine, FL, Christine Sanborn of Alton, NH, Victor Coffin of Brunswick, Alan and his wife Jean Coffin of Bowdoinham, Frank Coffin and his wife Darlene Coffin of Harpswell. Many thanks to Tracy Bennett of Auburn, Susan Higgins of South Portland and Betty Lasu of Portland. A special thanks to Northern Light Homecare and Southern Maine Hospice. Visiting hours will be held on Friday, November 15, 2019, from 4-8 PM, and a celebration of Richard's life will be held Saturday, November 16, 2019 at 11AM at Jones, Rich and Barnes, 199 Woodford Street, Portland, with the Rev. Beth Carter officiating, with a reception to follow. Cremation arrangements are under the direction of the Conroy-Tully Walker Funeral Home of Portland. To view Richard's memorial page or share an online condolence, please visit www.ConroyTullyWalker.com.

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  1. I was a student if Dicks and for many years he was a close friend of my husband and myself, such a gentle soul he was and had many moments as the absent minded professor.

    – Laura Marshall

  2. I’m not sure why this is the 1st time I have read the full text associated withDick Coffin on this website, but What a fascinating life he has led. I got to be part of that life because my father is his friend Julian Holmes And my uncle is David Holmes. I remember Peter and Dick coming to Maryland For a visit in the 1980s. There was a talk show on the radio about whether or not a completely capitalist society could survive. Duck called in with his opinion that it could not because women weren’t smart enough. He spoke at length about how none of his ex wives was smart enough for him, and that to negotiate in a capitalist society one must be smart. He had the radio talk show hosts laughing so hard they could barely talk. The next day at work, my father’s friends asked if he had heard that particular show, and dad’s expression was all they needed to know who was involved. Uncle Peter also called in to a different portion of the show totalk about racism but that is a story for another tribute. Thank you Rose for sharing this wonderful page!

    – Eleanor wilson

  3. Dick, we will all miss you! I will never forget the tuna tuner you invented for me. Say hi to Uncle Peter! Love you…

    – Eleanor

  4. Dr. Coffin was a longtime colleague of my father, Jimmy Sullivan, at USM. And he was my professor at USM when I returned at 40 to take his “Literature of the Sixties” class which I loved. A smart but unassuming man. Vicki Sullivan

    – vicki sullivan


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