Edwin Warfield III explained

Edwin Warfield III
Term Start:1970
Term End:1980
Predecessor:George M. Gelston
Successor:Warren D. Hodges
Party:Democratic
Birth Date:June 3, 1924
Birth Place:Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Death Place:St. Agnes Health-Care
Residence:Oakdale Manor, Maryland, United States
Children:5
Office:Adjutant General of Maryland
Termend1:1970
Termstart1:January 1963
Successor1:J. Hugh Nichols
Predecessor1:James Clark, Jr.
Daniel M. Murray, Jr.
Office1:Member of the Maryland House of Delegates from Howard County
Relatives:Edwin Warfield (grandfather)
Education:University of Maryland (BS)
Module:
Embed:yes
Allegiance: United States
Battles:World War II
Serviceyears:1943-45

Edwin Warfield III (June 3, 1924  - October 4, 1999) was a Maryland State Delegate from Howard County, Maryland. Warfield was born at his family manor Oakdale, where his grandfather lived as Governor of Maryland. Warfield attended the Gilman School, then graduated in 1942 from the Kent School in Connecticut. He later attended Cornell University and the University of Maryland where he earned a B.S. in Agriculture.

Warfield was elected to the Howard General Assembly House of Delegates in 1963, but his slate lost all county council seats to Republicans on slow growth ballots that later approved the 100,000 person development of Columbia, Maryland in his home county.[1] Warfield, Delegate William Hanna and Senator James A. Clark, Jr. would be the approvers of state money to provide road water and sewer for the Rouse project.[2]

He was chair of the Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee from 1963-1970. He enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1943; serving in the Pacific theater flying P-51 Mustangs through World War II.[3] In 1950 he became the commander of the Maryland National Guard unit at Martin State Airport.[4] From 1970 to 1980 he held the position of Adjutant general of Maryland.[5] [6]

He was the Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive of The Daily Record which was founded by his grandfather Edwin Warfield. He sat on the Governor's Commission on the Expansion of the University of Maryland. He created the Warfield Commission on higher education in Maryland, which recommended consolidating state colleges under the University of Maryland.[7] He was also part of the World War II Memorial Commission.

He was also a member of the Howard County Hunt Club, Maryland Club, South River Club, Sons of the American Revolution, Bachelors Cotillion, St. Andrew Episcopal Church in Glenwood and St. John Episcopal Church in Ellicott City.[8]

Warfield died of congestive heart failure October 4, 1999.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jim Clark Soldier Farmer Legislator. 109. James A Clark Jr..
  2. Book: New City Upon a Hill. Joseph Rocco Mitchell, David L. Stebenne. 62.
  3. News: The Baltimore Sun. I REMEMBER: 4 Days on a life Raft and Rescued by a Sub. 23 March 1980.
  4. News: The Baltimore Sun. Thanks: Air Guard base is named for Warfield. 17 September 1982.
  5. News: The Baltimore Sun. Gen. Warfield retiring as adjutant general. 16 November 1979.
  6. News: The Baltimore Sun. Warfield's Recommendation Ignored?. 14 April 1980.
  7. News: The Baltimore Sun. Higher Education Group Criticizes Warfield Report. 20 October 1960.
  8. Web site: Edwin Warfield III - Maryland State Archives. 24 September 2013.