- Xenophon P. Wilfley
Xenophon Pierce Wilfley (1871-1931) was a Democratic Party politician who represented the state of
Missouri in theU.S. Senate for five months in 1918.Wilfley was born near
Mexico, Missouri onMarch 18 ,1871 , and attended local country schools in his youth. An 1891 graduate ofClarksburg College , he graduated fromCentral Methodist College inFayette, Missouri in 1894, teaching there for one year and at Sedalia High School inSedalia, Missouri , for three. In 1899 he graduated fromWashington University law school and began the practice of law in St. Louis. From 1917 to 1918 he was the chairman of the city's board of election commissioners; in 1918 he was appointed to the Senate as a Democrat to fill out the term ofWilliam J. Stone , who had died on April 14, 1918. Wilfley served fromApril 30 toNovember 5 , and was the chairman of theCommittee on Industrial Expositions . He unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination fot the Senate seat, being defeated by Joseph Folk, who in turn lost to RepublicanSelden P. Spencer in November. After leaving the Senate, Wilfley he resumed the practice of law, becoming president of theMissouri Bar Association in 1925. He died in St. Louis onMay 4 ,1931 and is buried inOak Grove Cemetery .Further reading
CongBio|W000471|name=WILFLEY, Xenophon Pierce|inline=1 - Congressional biography, with picture
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