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Harry Thomas Warner

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Harry Thomas Warner

Birth
Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama, USA
Death
12 Sep 1925 (aged 54–55)
Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA
Burial
Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec C-4, Lot 190
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Brady Riley Warner and​ Martha (Howell) Warner.

Married Edith Baldwin Jul 29, 1895, in Harris Co., Texas.

Publisher of Paris Morning Post (Paris, Texas).


HARRY T. WARNER, first and incumbent president of the Houston Press Club, managing editor of the Houston Post, was born at Montgomery, Alabama, and at an early age was brought by his parents to Texas; entered the newspaper business at 12 years of age at Austin, Texas, as a galley boy on the Austin Statesman (1882); served his time as a printer; made a tour of the principal cities of Texas and of the East and then became connected with the editorial department of the Houston Post, with which paper he has remained in various managerial capacities for twenty years. Is remarked for his tolerance of all men's views on all subjects, reserving to himself the right to think on all things as he sees fit; a conservative Democrat who believes that "times change but principles do not." A member of the Rotary Club and the Lumbermens Club. Chairman of the Texas-Oklahoma-Arkansas circuit of the Associated Press.

"Men of Affairs of Houston and Environs:
A Newspaper Reference Work"
1913
Son of Brady Riley Warner and​ Martha (Howell) Warner.

Married Edith Baldwin Jul 29, 1895, in Harris Co., Texas.

Publisher of Paris Morning Post (Paris, Texas).


HARRY T. WARNER, first and incumbent president of the Houston Press Club, managing editor of the Houston Post, was born at Montgomery, Alabama, and at an early age was brought by his parents to Texas; entered the newspaper business at 12 years of age at Austin, Texas, as a galley boy on the Austin Statesman (1882); served his time as a printer; made a tour of the principal cities of Texas and of the East and then became connected with the editorial department of the Houston Post, with which paper he has remained in various managerial capacities for twenty years. Is remarked for his tolerance of all men's views on all subjects, reserving to himself the right to think on all things as he sees fit; a conservative Democrat who believes that "times change but principles do not." A member of the Rotary Club and the Lumbermens Club. Chairman of the Texas-Oklahoma-Arkansas circuit of the Associated Press.

"Men of Affairs of Houston and Environs:
A Newspaper Reference Work"
1913


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