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Reserved And Resilient, Bombing Victim Anthony Stephan House Had Agreed To Mentor Kids This Summer

Anthony Stephan House (left) with his former Pflugerville High classmates - Lee Rusk, Kevin Cotton, Jeff Lewis and Norrell Waynewood - at their 20-year class reunion in 2016.
Courtesy of Tiffany Clay
Anthony Stephan House (left) with his former Pflugerville High classmates - Lee Rusk, Kevin Cotton, Jeff Lewis and Norrell Waynewood - at their 20-year class reunion in 2016.

Anthony Stephan House, who was killed March 2 in the first of a series of bombings in Austin, was a father and a graduate of Texas State University. According to high school friends, he was quiet, humble and self-assured, even at a young age.

鈥淚t was always a no-small-talk-type conversation with him,鈥 said high school friend Kevin Cotton, who now lives in Fort Worth. 鈥淚 liked that about him.鈥

Cotton ran track with House, who went by Stephan, and said the 39-year-old was a talented athlete. He was also a quiet guy who was well-liked.

鈥淚鈥檝e never seen him out there acting extroverted,鈥 Cotton said. 鈥淗e was still cool, though. Everybody knew him.鈥

House hugs his daughter, then 2.
Credit Courtesy of Norrell Waynewood
House hugs his daughter, then 2.

House attended Pflugerville High School in the '90s, and he received a degree in finance from Texas State University in 2008. He worked as a project manager for Texas Quarries until February 2017, according to the company. Friends said he had an interest in real estate.

According to news reports, House was married and had an 8-year-old daughter.

Since House鈥檚 death, three more bombs have exploded throughout Austin. On March 12, 17-year-old  and his mother was injured. Hours later, a 75-year-old woman was seriously injured in a second bombing. On Sunday, an explosion in Southwest Austin 

KUT was not able to reach House鈥檚 family, although his brother said Monday he would be speaking on behalf of the family soon. House鈥檚 stepfather, Freddie Dixon,   last week that he thought the first two bombings, which killed and injured members of black families, were racially motivated.

鈥淢y diagnosis: Number one, I think it鈥檚 a hate crime. Number two, somebody鈥檚 got some kind of vendetta here,鈥 the retired pastor and civil rights advocate told The Post.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just coincidental,鈥 Dixon said. 鈥淪omebody鈥檚 done their homework on both of us, and they knew what they were doing.鈥

Held In 'High Regard'

Friends said House鈥檚 silence was never because he was afraid to speak up or easily intimidated.

鈥淵ou may not think he鈥檚 paying attention, but I do think he鈥檚 assertive and kind of reading the situation 鈥 taking it all in,鈥 said Jeff Lewis, another high school friend who now lives in Houston. He and House were on a track relay team with two other boys in high school, and the group won the district title.

House (second from left) with his track team at Pflugerville High: Jeff Lewis, Duriel Coleman and Jacob Guzman.
Credit Courtesy of Jeff Lewis
House (second from left) with his track team at Pflugerville High: Jeff Lewis, Duriel Coleman and Jacob Guzman.

House鈥檚 older brother, Corey, was murdered in 1994. Lewis said House soldiered the loss with a maturity he had difficulty understanding as a teenager.

鈥淏eing a freshman in high school, we鈥檙e still becoming ourselves at that point,鈥 Lewis said. 鈥淔or something so tragic to take place, I found him to be very resilient and not so much bitter, but focusing on the positive and moving forward. That鈥檚 not something I could have done at that age. 鈥 I really held him in high regard and respected him for how he handled that.鈥

Greg Padgitt, who also attended Pflugerville High, said he had recently reached out to House to help him with a mentoring program this summer aimed at connecting young children with successful black businessmen in the area.

鈥淲e were going to start going into the schools and just mentoring boys and girls who really don鈥檛 have a male figure in their life,鈥 he said.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .

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Audrey McGlinchy is the City Hall reporter at KUT, covering the Austin City Council and the policies they discuss. She comes to Texas from Brooklyn, where she tried her hand at publishing, public relations and nannying. Audrey holds English and journalism degrees from Wesleyan University and the City University of New York. She got her start in journalism as an intern at KUT Radio during a summer break from graduate school. While completing her master's degree in New York City, she interned at the New York Times Magazine and Guernica Magazine.