Robert Eckels height - How tall is Robert Eckels?

Robert Eckels was born on 14 March, 1957 in Houston, Texas, United States, is a Lawyer and businessman. At 63 years old, Robert Eckels height not available right now. We will update Robert Eckels's height soon as possible.

Now We discover Robert Eckels's Biography, Age, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of net worth at the age of 65 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Lawyer and businessman
Robert Eckels Age 65 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 14 March 1957
Birthday 14 March
Birthplace Houston, Texas, United States
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 14 March. He is a member of famous Lawyer with the age 65 years old group.

Robert Eckels Weight & Measurements

Physical Status
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Who Is Robert Eckels's Wife?

His wife is Jet Winkley Eckels

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Jet Winkley Eckels
Sibling Not Available
Children Daughter Kirby Eckels

Robert Eckels Net Worth

He net worth has been growing significantly in 2021-22. So, how much is Robert Eckels worth at the age of 65 years old? Robert Eckels’s income source is mostly from being a successful Lawyer. He is from . We have estimated Robert Eckels's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2022 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2022 Under Review
Net Worth in 2021 Pending
Salary in 2021 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income Lawyer

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Timeline

2006

In 2006, Eckels was actually elected to a fourth term as county judge but left some four months later to enter the private sector. Commissioners named transportation consultant and former state Representative Ed Emmett of Kingwood in northeast Houston to succeed Eckels as county judge.

2005

As county judge, Eckels also chaired the Harris County Toll Road Authority, the only county-owned toll road system in the United States. Judge Eckels received international recognition for the response by Harris County to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The Astrodome and Reliant Park became the largest shelter operation in American history, with more than 250,000 residents given refuge during the storm. In 2005, Esquire named Eckels the "Best and Brightest - Citizen of the Year" for his leadership during the storms: "When the City of New Orleans evacuated to Houston, Harris County Judge Robert Eckels was an island of competence in the face of catastrophe." The American City and County Magazine named Eckels "County Leader of the Year 2006."

1996

Lindsay himself rebounded politically to win election in 1996 to the District 7 seat in the Texas State Senate.

1994

Upon leaving the house, Eckels began a twelve-year stint as the county judge of the most populous county in Texas. He succeeded the 20-year incumbent, Moderate Republican Jon Lindsay, who caught up in scandal did not run again for county judge. Lindsay and the senior Eckels had been colleagues and occasional rivals on the commissioners court. However, Lindsay supported the younger Eckels for county judge in 1994, when Eckels defeated the Democrat Vince Ryan (born c. 1947).

1992

In his last general election for the legislature in 1992, Eckels had no Democratic opponent but defeated Clyde Garland, nominee of the Libertarian Party, 39,518 votes (88 percent) to 5,413 (12 percent). Eckels was succeeded in the House in 1995 by the Houston lawyer Joe Nixon, a Republican who also served District 133 for six terms.

1984

The senior Eckels had close political ties with Vice President George Herbert Walker Bush. In 1984, while his son was a first-term legislator, Commissioner Eckels turned the Harris County government into a virtual arm of the Reagan-Bush re-election campaign. He used county telephones, computers, and employees to establish an organization called the National Conference of Republican County Officials. An official in Roanoke County, Virginia, said that the conference was "a working arm for the White House and the national [Republican] Party." Eckels later said that he had used at least $20,000 of his own funds for Reagan-Bush mailings and did not report the expenditure to the Federal Election Commission. Eckels died less than a year after Bush became the U.S. President. The seventeen-year commissioner was convicted of theft and forced to resign. For a number of years his name was synonymous with political corruption in the Houston area.

1982

In 1982 at the age of twenty-five, Eckels was elected to the first of his six terms in the House. At the time Bill Clements, the first Republican governor of Texas since Reconstruction, was simultaneously unseated by the Democrat Mark White, then the state attorney general. Eckels did not seek a seventh term in 1994, when George W. Bush was elected governor. He represented the newly numbered House District 133 in Harris County.

1972

Eckels' father, Robert Young "Bob" Eckels, Jr., was a trustee of the Houston Independent School District who in 1972 was elected the Precinct 3 county commissioner, a position that he filled until shortly before his death on Christmas Eve in 1989. As commissioner, the senior Eckels was accused of having tapped his office telephones, mail fraud, and theft of timber used on county bridge construction. In 1987, he pleaded no contest to charges that he had accepted from a county contractor the construction of a road on his farm in Austin County within the Houston metropolitan district. Eckels told The Houston Chronicle that his father "played the [political] game by their rules. The world has moved."

1957

Robert Allen Eckels (born March 14, 1957) is a lawyer and businessman from his native Houston, Texas, who was from 1983 to 1995 a Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives and from 1995 to 2007 the county judge of Harris County.

His wife, the former Jet Winkley (born c. 1957), was a lobbyist for the Metropolitan Transit Authority while she and Eckels were engaged and he was a state legislator. Eckels said that because of their relationship he avoided sponsoring transit authority bills. The couple has a daughter, Kirby Eckels.

1931

Eckels' uncle, Paul Glenn "Buck" Eckels, Sr. (1931-2011), for many years owned the Lawyers Title Insurance Company of Houston.