Thomas W. Williams (politician)
Thomas W. Williams | |
---|---|
Member of the Los Angeles City Council from the 12th district | |
In office July 1, 1929 – April 13, 1931 | |
Preceded by | Douglas Eads Foster |
Succeeded by | Thomas F. Ford |
Personal details | |
Born | 1867 |
Died | 1931 (aged 63–64) Los Angeles, California |
Political party | Socialist |
Spouse |
Addie May Cady (m. 1892) |
Children | 6 |
Thomas W. Williams (ca. 1867–1931) was a former coal miner, school principal and church minister who was a member of the Los Angeles, California, City Council between 1929 and 1931. He was the first councilman elected under the 1925 city charter to die in office.
Background
[edit]Williams was born around 1867[1] in Utah and began work in a coal mine when he was "little more than 8, to support his mother, his father having died when he was a baby." He attended grammar and high schools at night and when he was 18 he became principal of a school in Lucas, Iowa. He became a minister of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, preached and traveled through Europe as a missionary.[2]
He was married in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at age 25 to Addie May Cady. They had six children. After the Williamses moved to Los Angeles, they took up residence in the Silver Lake district.[2][3]
Political activity
[edit]Williams's first run for the City Council was in 1911, when he came in seventeenth in a field of eighteen at-large candidates, with the highest nine being elected.
In 1914 he was the California State Secretary for the Socialist Party of America and was speaking on behalf of an eight-hour day proposal on the California ballot. He appeared before a group of farmers in Orange County and told them that "if the law would injure California's prosperity the Socialists would not want to see it passed."[4]
As a Socialist, he was opposed to the direct-primary method of nominating candidates for public office. He said in 1915 that
The direct primary law permits every vice it is supposed to correct. . . . It relieves employers the necessity of hiring detectives to learn the political affiliation of employees. It makes perjurers of thousands, who register contrary to their convictions, in order to save their jobs.[5]
In the 1929 municipal election he ousted incumbent Douglas Eads Foster.[1]
Death and aftermath
[edit]Williams died in Glendale on April 11, 1931, after a cerebral hemorrhage, leaving his widow and four children, Ward Williams, Wallace R. Williams, Ruth Funk and Helen Livingston. Presbyterian services were followed by cremation.[2][6]
Williams was the first City Council member to die in office after adoption of the new city charter in 1925—just a few weeks shy of the May 1931 election, in which Williams was not a candidate. Although his wife, Addie Williams, was proposed as an interim council member, the City Council voted the idea down, 9–6, and the seat was left vacant until July 1, when the municipal election winner—Thomas Francis Ford—was installed.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Small Army in Council Lists," Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1929, page B-1
- ^ a b c "Councilman Williams Dies," Los Angeles Times, April 12, 1931, page A-1
- ^ Location of the Williams residence on "Mapping L.A."
- ^ "Agitator Is Put to Rout," Los Angeles Times, August 19, 1914, page II-8
- ^ "Socialists to War on Direct Primary Law," Los Angeles Times, March 15, 1915
- ^ "Last Rites for Councilman to Be Tomorrow," Los Angeles Times, April 13, 1931
- ^ "Vacancy Action Deferred," Los Angeles Times, April 22, 1931, page A-1
- 1860s births
- 1931 deaths
- Schoolteachers from Iowa
- American coal miners
- Community of Christ missionaries
- Los Angeles City Council members
- People from Utah
- American school principals
- Socialist Party of America politicians from California
- American members of the Community of Christ
- American Latter Day Saint missionaries