Background
Warren Gard was born in Hamilton, Ohio, son of Samuel Zearly Gard and Mary Duke. His father was also an attorney, prosecutor and newspaper publisher.
United States representative lawyer politician
Warren Gard was born in Hamilton, Ohio, son of Samuel Zearly Gard and Mary Duke. His father was also an attorney, prosecutor and newspaper publisher.
Warren Gard attended the public schools in Hamilton, attended the University of Cincinnati and graduated from the Cincinnati Law School in 1894.
South. Z. Gard served as Butler County, Ohio prosecuting attorney from 1862-1866 and again from 1871-1872, being one of the prosecutors in the murder case in which Clement Vallandigham, acting for the defense, accidentally shot himself. Samuel Gard also published the True Telegraph newspaper which became the Butler County Democrat. He was admitted to the bar in 1894 and commenced practice in Hamilton.
In 1910, Warren Gard married Pearl Woods of Hamilton.
Warren Gard was elected county prosecutor in 1894, the youngest in the history of the county, holding the office for 10 years. During this period he prosecuted some outstanding criminal cases, notably that of the State of Ohio versus Alfred A. Knapp, several murder cases, the Bishop faith-cure case, and the Spivey risk cases.
He was elected Court of Common Pleas judge in 1907 and held the office for one term until 1912. In 1912, Warren Gard was elected as a Democrat from Ohio’s Third District to the Sixty-third Congress.
In the summer of 1919 he led the fight in Congress for the repeal of wartime prohibition and for a more liberal definition of an "intoxicant." He was not a candidate for renomination in 1920, but in 1922, ran unsuccessfully for the House seat he had held for four terms.
After his political career, he resumed the practice of law in Hamilton where he died. He is interred in Greenwood Cemetery.
Foreign thirty-five years he was an honored member of the Hamilton Barometer He was re-elected in 1914, 1916 and 1918, one of the ablest members of the Ohio delegation during the First World War period. He was a member of the House Judiciary Committee, sustaining the reputation during his years in the House as the most dignified member.
Married Pearl Woods, June 22, 1910.