Biography of Henry Fairbanks Warden - McDowell Co. WV The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society Inc. Chicago and New York Volume 11 Page 240 Bio- Henry Fairbanks Warden-McDowell Co. Henry is a young man who has shown fine executive and administrating ability in connection with the coal-mining industry in West Virginia, where he is a general manager of the Williams Pocahontas Coal Company at War, McDowell Co., besides being general manager also for the Orinoco Mining Co., Orinoco, on Pond Creek, Pike Co., Kentucky. His residence and official headquarters are maintained at Bluefield, Mercer Co., West Virginia. A scion of staunch Colonial ancestry in New England, Mr. Warden was born in the town of Monroe, Grafton Co., New Hampshire, on the 29th of May, 1893, and he is the son of Alexander and Susie (Fairbanks) Warden, both likewise natives of Monroe, Grafton Co., New Hampshire, where the father was a representative merchant and farmer and influential in political circles and public affairs of a local order. He died in 1908, at the age of seventy-four years. The first wife of Alexander Warden bore the maiden name of Lucy Flint, and his second wife, mother of the subject of this review, died in 1907, at the age of fourty-four years. Mr. Warden served as draft officer in his native country in the period of the civil war, and he represented his county in the State Legislature, served as its sheriff, was city clerk and postmaster at Monroe, and held other positions of trust. A man of inviolable integrity and mature judgment, he was a guide and counselor in his community and commanded unqualified popular confidence. He was one of the builders of the Methodist Episcopal Church edifice at Monroe, and was one of the most zealous and liberal members of the church. His political allegiance was given to the republican party and he was affiliated with the Masonic fraternity. He passed the last seven years of his life in supervising his farms and other property interests. Alexander Warden was a member of a family of eleven sons and two daughters, and his father, Andrew Warden, was one of the substantial citizens of Monroe, Grafton Co., New Hampshire, at the time of hos death. Alexander and Lucy (Flint) Warden had one son, Oliver S. who is now owner and manager of the Great Falls Daily Tribune at Great Falls, Montana. Of the three children of the second marriage Henry F. of this sketch is the eldest. David R. is chief inspector and chemist in the employ of W.C.Atwater & Company at Bluefield, West Virginia. He was a student at Norwich University at Northfield, Vermont. In the World war period he was with the Near East Relief Commission in Turkey and Armenia, a service with which he connected eighteen months before his return to the United States. Ralph B., a youth of seventeen years(1922), resides with his brother, Henry F., at Bluefield. The early education of Henry F. Warden was acquired in the public schools of his native county and was supplemented by a four year's course at St. Johnsbury Academy, a leading preparatory school at St. Johnsbury, Vermont. Thereafter he held a clerical position with Boston & Montana Smelting Co. at Great Falls, Montana, now a subsidiary of the famous Anaconda Smelting Co., and upon his return to the East he took a course in technical and industrial chemistry at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, New York, in which institution he was graduate in 1913. Soon afterward he came to Bluefield, West Virginia, and took the position of chemist in the office of thePocahontas Coke Co. Eighteen months later he became chief inspector and chemist for William C. Atwater & Co., his duties involving inspection of coal mines and their products and the preparation of coal for market. He retained this position until he was made manager of the Williams Pocahontas Coal Co. and the Orinoco Mining Company's properties, owned by the Oriental Navigation Co., New York City, who are in a position to ship their coal from the West Virginia and Kentucky coal fields to all parts of the world. The Oracle, official publication of the Oriental Navigation Co., in one of its recent issues published a full-page portrait of Mr. Warden, who is probably the youngest general manager of coal-mining corporations to be found in West Virginia. In 1915 Mr. Warden married Miss Ethel Witt, daughter of J.F. Witt, of Bluefield, and the two children of this union are Henry Fairbanks, Jr., and James Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. Warden are members of the Bland Street Methodist Church, South, and are popular in the representative social circles of their home city. Submitted by Joan Wyatt **************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. ****************************************************************