Charles J. Warner

Charles J. Warner
25th Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
In office
1949  1955 (died in office)
Governor Val Peterson
Robert B. Crosby
Preceded by Robert B. Crosby
Succeeded by Dwight W. Burney
Personal details
Born March 29, 1875
Lancaster County, Nebraska
Died September 24, 1955 (aged 79)
Lincoln, Nebraska
Political party Republican

Charles Joseph Warner (March 29, 1875 - September 24, 1955) was a Nebraska politician. He was a state legislator for 26 years, the first speaker of the state's unicameral legislature, and a four-term Lieutenant Governor.

Warner was born in Lancaster County, Nebraska in 1875. He graduated from University of Nebraska in 1899 and Columbian Law School in Washington, D.C. in 1902.[1]

He served in the Nebraska House of Representatives from 1901 to 1907, the Nebraska Senate from 1919 to 1937, and the new unicameral legislature from 1937 to 1939. He made three unsuccessful attempts to run for governor, including against incumbent governor Robert Leroy Cochran in 1938.[2]

Warner was also a farmer and cattle breeder. He died at a hospital in Lincoln on September 24, 1955, during his fourth term as Lieutenant Governor.[3]

His son Jerome Warner was a state legislator from 1963-1997, and also served as speaker from 1969 to 1971.[4]


Preceded by
None
Speaker of the Nebraska Legislature
1937–1939
Succeeded by
William H. Diers
Preceded by
Robert B. Crosby
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
19491955
Succeeded by
Dwight W. Burney


References

  1. Nebraska Blue Book 1936, p.249
  2. (4 April 1940). Nebraska Vote May Give Clue to Farm Trend, Portsmouth Times (United Press story)
  3. (26 September 1955). Charles J. Warner, The New York Times
  4. (22 April 1997). Jerome Warner helped schools receive state aid, Sarasota Herald Tribune

External links