Delos Franklin Wilcox

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Delos Franklin Wilcox (April 22, 1873 in Ida, Michigan – April 4, 1928[1]) was a United States expert on municipal government.

Biography

He graduated from the

New York Civil Service Commission. From 1914 to 1917 he was deputy commissioner of the New York department of water supply, gas and electricity. In 1919-20 he served as an advisor to the Federal Electric Railways Commission.[2]

Personal

He married Mina Gates in 1898, and four children survived him. He had an orchard at Elk Rapids, Michigan, which he gave much attention in later years.[1]

Works

He was a recognized authority on municipal government and wrote extensively on the subject. His works include:

  • Municipal Government in Michigan and Ohio, his Ph.D. thesis (1896)
  • The Study of City Government (1897)
  • Ethical Marriage (1900)
  • The American City (1904)
  • The Government of Great American Cities (1908)
  • Municipal Franchises (2 vols., 1910–11)
  • Great Cities in America: Their Problems and Their Government (1910)[3]
  • Government by all the People (1912)
  • Public Ownership of Public Utilities (1919), with William Bennett Munro, John Martin, and Samuel Orace Dunn
  • Analysis of the Electric Railway Problem (1921)[4]
  • Depreciation in Public Utilities (1925)
  • The Indeterminate Permit in Relation to Home Rule and Public Ownership (1926)
  • The Administration of Municipally Owned Utilities, a pamphlet outlining a work in progress at his death[1] (1931)

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Lent Dayton Upson (1936). "Wilcox, Delos Franklin". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  2. ^ "For City Ownership of Street Railways; Federal Commission's Own Expert Criticizes Report Favoring Service-at-Cost Plan". The New York Times. 1920-08-30. p. S17.
  3. OCLC 17641179
    .
  4. .

References

External links