William L. Smith (barber)
William L. Smith (1878 - ?) was a barber from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who served three terms as a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.
Background and business
Smith was born in the Town of Franklin in 1878. He attended both public and parochial schools, but at the age of fourteen years was compelled to earn his own living. He became a barber's apprentice, and continued in that trade. He opened his own shop on Kinnickinnic Avenue in Bay View about 1897. His official biography boasted, "Smith has always been a union man and employs nothing but union men in his shop".[1]
Legislative service
Smith was first elected in 1912 in the newly-redistricted twelfth Milwaukee County Assembly seat (12th Ward of the City of Milwaukee), succeeding fellow Socialist and union activist Jacob Hahn. Smith received 1,125 votes to 1,007 for Democrat John F. Filut, 450 for Republican Martin Gedlinski, and 31 for Prohibitionist Walter Lewerenz. Smith was assigned to the legislature's joint committee on finance.[2]
In 1914, Smith won re-election, with 932 votes to 828 for Gedlinski (now running as a Democrat) and 329 for Republican John J. Morris; and remained on the joint finance committee.[3] In 1916, he was again re-elected, with 944 votes to 785 for Democrat William T. Langen and 499 for Republican J. Jensen, and remained on the joint finance committee, on which he was now joined by newly elected Republican Assemblyman William L. Smith of Neillsville.[4]
In 1918, Smith was defeated for re-election by Democrat George Czerwinski, 1006 to 863.[5]
References
- The Wisconsin blue book Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1913; p. 674
- The Wisconsin blue book Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1913; pp. 281, 286, 674
- The Wisconsin blue book, 1915 Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1915; pp. 251, 475
- The Wisconsin blue book, 1917 Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1917; pp. 297, 490, 522
- Hunter, Paul F., ed. The Wisconsin blue book, 1919 Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1919; p. 162