Paul L. Wagner
Paul L. Wagner was an American politician from Pennsylvania.
Early life and education
Wagner born in Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, on September 19, 1897, the son of Samuel Paul Wagner and Emma Elizabeth Fox. His father was a traveling salesman who died several days after Wagner's election to the Pennsylvania State Senate.Wagner graduated from Tamaqua High School in 1915. He then graduated from the Alexander Hamilton Institute.
Career
He worked in various businesses including as district sales manager for Bastian Brothers Company and Jostens, following in his father’s footsteps as a salesman. He also was the city editor and a reporter in the sports department for the Tamaqua Evening Courier newspaper.Political career
Wagner was first elected as a Republican to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for Schuylkill County for the 1939 term and served one term. He served on the Committee to Investigate Manner of Conducting Civil Service Examinations. He was unsuccessful in his campaign for re-election to the Pennsylvania State House in 1940. However, from 1941 to 1942, he continued to work in the House as a Speaker’s appointee to the Committee to Investigate Unemployment Compensation Civil Service.He was elected to the Pennsylvania State House for the 1943 term. He was then elected to the Pennsylvania State Senate, where he served for twenty years until 1964. While in the Pennsylvania State Senate, he served on the following committees and commissions:
- Commission to Study School System
- Joint Legislative Sub-Committee on Municipal Authorities
- Joint Legislative Committee on Retirement Systems and Laws
- Joint Legislative Committee on Education
- Joint Legislative Committee on Post-High School Education
- Joint Legislative Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Child Welfare
- Post-High School Commission
- Joint State Government Commission
- Advisory Council on Library Development
- Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency. Wagner was the first chairman of this agency and helped to consolidate the commonwealth's school districts.
After his career in Pennsylvania state politics, Wagner was appointed president of the First National Bank in Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, where he was responsible for negotiating a merger with Miners National Bank of Pottsville, a predecessor of Santander Bank. He then later served as a bank director emeritus.