- William D. Becker
William D. Becker (Born
October 23 1896 inEast St. Louis, Illinois - DiedAugust 1 1943 inSt. Louis, Missouri ) was the thirty-fifthMayor of St. Louis (from 1941 to 1943).Becker graduated from
Harvard University and attended St. Louis Law School. After 15 years of private law practice, he was elected to a twelve year term on the St. Louis Court of Appeals in 1916. He was re-elected for another 12 year term in 1928. In 1941 Becker was the Republican Party nominee for Mayor of St. Louis. He defeated incumbent MayorBernard F. Dickmann (a Democrat) who was seeking election to a third term in the April 1941 election.Perhaps the most significant development during Becker's term as mayor was the adoption of a
civil service amendement to the City Charter. The amendement enacted a merit system for the hiring of city employees. Prior to that time, apolitical patronage system prevailed in which all city employees could be replaced with a change of partisan administration. Becker supported the civil service reform and it was approved by the voters in September 1941. Becker also retainedRaymond Tucker who had been appointed Smoke Commissioner by Mayor Dickmann, and supported his efforts to reduce air pollution within the city.On the Sunday afternoon of
August 1 ,1943 , St. Louis aircraft manufacturerWilliam B. Robertson was hosting the first public demonstration of a new glider designed by his company. As a crowd of spectators watched at the Lambert-St. Louis Airport, Mayor Becker, Roberton, and other St. Louis celebrities boarded the glider that was towed along by a transport plane for a flight over the city. Without warning, the right wing of the glider broke off, along with the towing cable, and the glider plummeted from an altitude of 1,500 feet, killing all ten persons on board. Robertson, who was 46, was buried atBellefontaine Cemetery .A.P. Kaufmann , president of the city's Board of Aldermen, succeeded Becker as Mayor of St. Louis [ "Transport Army Glider in Crash, Taking 10 Lives," "The Maryville Daily Forum" (Maryville, Mo.), August 2, 1943, p.2 ] .Source: Much of the original content for this article was based on the brief biographies of St. Louis Mayors found at the St. Louis Public Library's Website: http://exhibits.slpl.lib.mo.us/mayors/mayors3.asp
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