Suite 8F Group
"1930s" contains an extrinsic dash or other characters that are invalid for a date interpretation.
Suite 8F Group | |
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Formation | 1930s |
Extinction | 1960s |
Headquarters | Suite 8F |
Membership | • George R. Brown • Herman Brown • Jesse H. Jones • James A. Elkins • Gus Wortham • Lyndon B. Johnson • Sam Rayburn • John Connally • Walter Mischer • James Abercrombie • Hugh Roy Cullen • William Hobby • William Vinson • Morgan J. Davis • Albert Thomas • Alvin Wirtz • Thomas Corcoran • Homer Thornberry • Edward Clark |
The Suite 8F Group (named after the regular meeting place, rented long term by Brown & Root) was network of politically active businessman in Texas from the 1930s into the 1960s.[1] The name comes from the room in the Lamar Hotel in Houston, Texas where they held their meetings.[1] The room was reported to have been permanently rented to and paid by Brown and Root.[1]
According to Texas Monthly, the 8F Crowd had gained "unequaled influence in state and national government" after the end World War II when George R. Brown, Gus Wortham, and Charles Francis of Vinson & Elkins founded Texas Eastern.[1] The group was reported to exercise leverage over Big Oil.[1] The 8F Crowd had connections to various media outlets including the Houston Chronicle, the Houston Post, television station KPRC, and radio stations KPRC and KTRK-TV#History.[1]
Known members
9 of the 19 of the members already have pages here:
Member | Description |
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George Rufus Brown | |
Herman Brown | The 'Brown' in construction company "Brown and Root", a leader in the military-industrial complex. |
Edward Clark | |
John Connally | Corrupt Texas politician who was close to Lyndon B. Johnson. Seriously wounded while riding in John F. Kennedy's car at Dealey Plaza in Dallas. Later United States Secretary of the Treasury under Nixon. |
Tommy Corcoran | |
Hugh Roy Cullen | |
Jesse H. Jones | |
Sam Rayburn | |
Homer Thornberry |
Rating
References
- ↑ a b c d e f Hurt III, Harry (April 1976). "The Most Powerful Texans". Texas Monthly. Austin, Texas: Mediarex Communications Corporation. 4 (4): 73. ISSN 0148-7736. Retrieved December 4, 2014.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").