William M. Phillips

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_M._Phillips

William Milton Phillips (September 20, 1900 – June 9, 1962) was a Republican businessman and politician from Philadelphia. Phillips was born in Philadelphia in 1900 to David and Sally Phillips, and was a descendant of Declaration of Independence signer Samuel Chase. He graduated from Northeast High School in Philadelphia and attended the West Philadelphia Commercial School, a private business academy. He married Marian E. Thompson and had one daughter, Patricia. He worked in sales for the Narragansett Wire Company and became involved in local Republican politics. rdf:langString
rdf:langString William M. Phillips
xsd:integer 52042754
xsd:integer 1105818026
rdf:langString William Milton Phillips (September 20, 1900 – June 9, 1962) was a Republican businessman and politician from Philadelphia. Phillips was born in Philadelphia in 1900 to David and Sally Phillips, and was a descendant of Declaration of Independence signer Samuel Chase. He graduated from Northeast High School in Philadelphia and attended the West Philadelphia Commercial School, a private business academy. He married Marian E. Thompson and had one daughter, Patricia. He worked in sales for the Narragansett Wire Company and became involved in local Republican politics. In the 1951 municipal election, Phillips worked with an independent faction of Republicans for the mayoral nomination of Walter P. Miller, who lost to minister Daniel A. Poling, and for the district attorney nomination of Raymond A. Speiser, who also lost. Nevertheless, members of the independent faction of the Republican political machine loyal to Miller and Speiser were able to secure Phillips's nomination to City Council's 2nd district when incumbent withdrew from the race. That year, Philadelphia had adopted a new city charter and Democrats swept to victory in mayoral and city council races, breaking the Republicans' 67-year-long control of city government. The Democratic party was led by a reform faction that attracted the votes of many Republicans disappointed in political corruption under their party's leadership. In the ten city council district races, only Phillips was successful for the Republicans. While on the Council, Phillips called for investigation into the Pennsylvania Railroad's vast land holdings in Center City Philadelphia, which many saw as an obstacle to expansion of the city's business district. In 1954, Phillips joined with Democrats James Hugh Joseph Tate and Michael J. Towey in attempting to weaken the civil service reform of the new charter, but they were unsuccessful. In the election the next year, Phillips considered running for reelection, but withdrew in favor of lawyer David Zwanetz. Zwanetz went on to lose to Democrat Gaetano Giordano. In 1958, Phillips ran for the Republican nomination to Congress in Pennsylvania's 3rd district, but lost to James T. McDermott by a substantial margin. In 1962, he died of a pulmonary embolism at Roxborough Memorial Hospital. He was buried in Northwood Cemetery.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5817

data from the linked data cloud