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・ Frank W. Mayborn
・ Frank W. Milburn
・ Frank W. Mixter
・ Frank W. Nolen
・ Frank W. Notestein
・ Frank W. Parker
・ Frank W. Preston
・ Frank W. Rollins
・ Frank W. Springstead High School
・ Frank W. Stahnisch
・ Frank W. Wadsworth
・ Frank W. Warner
・ Frank W. Weston
・ Frank W. Wheeler
・ Frank W. White
Frank W. Wozencraft
・ Frank Waddey
・ Frank Wadsworth
・ Frank Wagener
・ Frank Wagenstroom
・ Frank Wagner
・ Frank Wainright
・ Frank Waite
・ Frank Wakefield
・ Frank Waldman
・ Frank Walker
・ Frank Walker (American football)
・ Frank Walker (Australian author)
・ Frank Walker (Australian journalist)
・ Frank Walker (Australian politician)


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Frank W. Wozencraft : ウィキペディア英語版
Frank W. Wozencraft

Frank Wilson Wozencraft (June 7, 1892 – September 3, 1966), attorney and civic leader, was mayor of Dallas from 1917 to 1919.
==Biography==
Frank Wilson Wozencraft was born on June 7, 1892 in Dallas, Texas to Gen. Alfred Prior Wozencraft and Victoria Lee Wilson. His father had been attorney general of Texas. He married Mary Victoria McReynolds, daughter of Dr. John Oliver McReynolds and Katherine Seay on June 21, 1922 in Dallas, Texas. They had two sons.
He graduated from North Dallas High School; received his B.A. and L.L.D. degrees from the University of Texas. His first position was in his father's law office. He worked as an attorney for Southwestern Telephone and Telegraph. At the outbreak of World War I, he organized the Dallas Greys. He transferred to Company B, 144th Infantry, 36th Division.
At age 26, Frank Wozencraft was the youngest individual elected Mayor of Dallas, defeating the incumbent mayor who was running for re-election.
After refusing re-nomination as mayor, he practiced law with the firm of Leake, Henry, Wozencraft & Frank in Dallas. In 1931 he joined Radio Corporation of America in New York City as the corporation's legal counsel. He resigned to serve in World War II first as Lt. Colonel and later Colonel with American-British Combined Communications Board of the Combined Chiefs of Staff.〔''Who Was Who in America''. Vol. 4 (1961-1966), p. 1035.〕
After the war, he returned to Dallas where he was a partner with former FCC commissioner Norman S. Case in the Washington, D.C. law firm of Case & Wozencraft and later with Leake, Henry, Golden, Burrow and Potts. He was a 32nd degree Freemason, Knight Templar, Shriner and a Rotarian. He was active with the Boy Scouts of America and a member of the local, state and American bar associations.〔Joan Jenkins Perez, "WOZENCRAFT, FRANK WILSON," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fwo33), accessed December 13, 2010.〕
Frank Wozencraft died September 3, 1966, in Dallas, Texas and was interred at the Greenwood Cemetery, Dallas.〔Texas State Board of Health. Bureau of Vital Statistics. Standard Certificate of Death. Frank W. Wozencraft. No. 6382〕〔"Dallas' Boy Mayor of 20s Dies at 74." ''The Dallas Morning News''. September 4, 1966, p. 18A.〕

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