William S. Hanna | |
---|---|
Member of the Maryland House of Delegates | |
In office January 1963 –January 1966 | |
Constituency | Howard County |
Howard County Council | |
In office 1969–1973 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Baltimore,Maryland,U.S. | May 9,1923
Died | November 28,1994 71) | (aged
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Betty Jean Kruse Hanna |
Children | Gary William Hanna,Edwin Fulton Hanna III |
William S. Hanna (May 9,1923 - November 28,1994) was a member of the Maryland House of Delegates. [1]
Hanna was raised at the Temora Mansion in Ellicott City. In 1936,he built a homemade trailer with his friend,future senator James A. Clark,Jr. While traveling with Clark to the West Coast he was run over by a car in San Diego with only a sprained ankle as an injury. [2] He graduated Ellicott City High School in 1943. Hanna served in the U.S. Army Air Corps and U.S. Air Force during World War II flying as a gunner on B-24 bombers.
In 1962,Hanna was selected by his childhood friend to run on a slate of candidates for Maryland State Delegate with Thomas E. Loyd. [3]
Hanna was also a Real estate broker and appraiser. Appraiser and negotiator,Patapsco Valley Park project. President,Howard County Real Estate Board,1961-63. District vice-president,Maryland Association of Real Estate Boards. Member,Rotary;Veterans of Foreign Wars. [4]
Hanna's son Gary,a helicopter pilot,was killed in Vietnam. In 1986 Hanna retired from his family company Breckinridge and Hanna real estate. [5]
Secretary,Howard County Board of Trade,1957-1959. Hanna was elected to the House of Delegates representing Howard County from 1963-1966. William Hanna,Edwin Wafield and Senator James A. Clark,Jr. would be the approvers of state money to provide road water and sewer for Columbia,MD. [6] In 1969 he was elected to the new County Council form of government in Howard County. In December 1971,Hanna replaces Edward L. Cochran as chairman of the Howard County Council by a 3-2 vote. [7] [8]
Edwin Warfield was an American politician and a member of the United States Democratic Party, and the 45th Governor of Maryland in the United States from 1904 to 1908. From 1902 to 1903 served president general of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
James Clark Jr. was the president of the Maryland State Senate from 1979 to 1983.
Temora, is a historic home located at Ellicott City, Howard County, Maryland. It is a T-shaped, two-story and cupola, Tuscan-style Victorian house of stuccoed tongue-and-groove boards. The house was built in 1857 after a design prepared by Norris G. Starkweather, a little-known but accomplished architect from Oxford, England, who also designed the First Presbyterian Church and Manse at West Madison Street and Park Avenue in the Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood in Baltimore, Maryland, with his later more famous assistant - Edmund G. Lind. The house was built for Dr. Arthur Pue Jr. on land given from his grandmother Mary Dorsey Pue of Belmont Estate. The name of the estate Temora comes from the poems of Ossian
John Ellicott was one of three Quaker brothers from Bucks County, Pennsylvania who chose the picturesque wilderness up river from Elk Ridge Landing to establish a flour mill. John and Andrew Ellicott moved to Baltimore County, Maryland in May 1771 purchasing 50 acres of Baltimore County land from Emanuel Teal and 35 acres from William Williams. John, Andrew, and Joseph Ellicott founded Ellicott's Mills which became one of the largest milling and manufacturing towns in the East.
Rock Hill College was a boys' boarding school located in Ellicott City, Maryland. The school was divided into two departments: preparatory and collegiate. The curriculum was based on physical education, sciences, and classical studies
Clark's Elioak Farm, located along Maryland Route 108 in Howard County, Maryland, is a historic farm covering 540 acres. All of the acreage is part of county or state farmland protection programs, barring use of the property for non-farm development. The Clarks, a family with a tradition of farming in Maryland spanning seven generations, have owned the Elioak farm since 1927.
Charles E. Miller (1902–1979) was an American politician and businessman in Howard County, Maryland
The David Force Natural Resource Area is a 221-acre (89 ha) wildlife area in Ellicott City, Maryland. It is located between Route 70 and 40 adjacent to the Turf Valley development in Howard County, Maryland, and operated by the Howard County Department of Recreation and Parks.
The Howard County Times is a daily newspaper serving Howard County, Maryland, USA. Although it claims to trace its origins to 1840, it was founded in 1869 as The Ellicott City Times, a weekly newspaper. In 1958, its name was changed to The Howard County Times and it was acquired by the then-independent local publisher Patuxent Publishing Company in 1978, along with other local papers. As of January 2016, The Howard County Times is currently a unit of the Baltimore Sun Media Group and maintains its online news page on The Baltimore Sun website. The Howard County Times website and social media pages provide news items from the Times as well as several other local area newspapers and magazines, including the Columbia Flier, the Laurel Leader, and Howard magazine.
The Howard County Courthouse is a historic building in Ellicott City, Maryland that was the courthouse for Howard County's Circuit Court from 1843 to 2021.
Wheatfield, also known by Wheatfields, Resolution Manor, or Wheatfield Farm is a historic home located south of Ellicott City, Howard County, Maryland.
Located Ellicott City in Howard County, Maryland, United States, Keewaydin Farm.
Fairfield Farm is a historic farm located near Ellicott City, now Columbia in Howard County, Maryland, United States.
The Spring Hill Farm is a historic slave plantation located in Ellicott City in Howard County, Maryland, United States.
James A. Clark Sr. was the Circuit Judge appointed by Maryland Governor Herbert O'Conor.
Elkridge Farm, is a historic slave plantation located in Ellicott City in Howard County, Maryland, United States.
George Ellicott House is a historic house located in Oella in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States.
Paul Griffith ("Pete") Stromberg was the owner since 1940 and editor since 1920 of "The Howard County Times", founded 1840 in Ellicott City, Maryland, the county seat of Howard County, which later grew into a syndicate of local community newspapers known as the "Stromberg Newspapers" in Howard County, Anne Arundel County, Prince George's County, Baltimore County and Baltimore City. He also was a Maryland State Senator from Howard County in the General Assembly of Maryland.
Edwin Warfield III 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.
J. Thomas Nissel was the state's attorney for Howard County, Maryland and a judge in Maryland's district and circuit courts.