Bill Dyke | |
Office: | Chief Judge of the 7th District of |
Term Start: | August 1, 2007 |
Term End: | July 31, 2013 |
Predecessor: | Michael J. Rosborough |
Successor: | James J. Duvall |
Office1: | Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge for the |
Term Start1: | January 1, 1997 |
Term End1: | January 2016 |
Appointer1: | Tommy Thompson |
Predecessor1: | James P. Fiedler |
Successor1: | Margaret M. Koehler |
Order2: | 49th |
Office2: | Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin |
Term Start2: | April 1969 |
Term End2: | April 17, 1973 |
Predecessor2: | Otto Festge |
Successor2: | Paul Soglin |
Birth Date: | 25 April 1930 |
Birth Place: | Princeton, Illinois, U.S. |
Death Place: | Dodgeville, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Death Cause: | Pancreatic cancer |
Spouse: | Christine |
Children: | 4 |
Party: | Republican |
Alma Mater: | DePauw University University of Wisconsin Law School |
William D. "Bill" Dyke (April 25, 1930March 10, 2016) was an American lawyer, judge, and politician. He was the 49th mayor of Madison, Wisconsin, from 1969 to 1973, and ran for Vice President of the United States on the American Independent Party ticket with presidential candidate Lester Maddox in the 1976 presidential election. He was also the Republican nominee for Governor of Wisconsin in the 1974 gubernatorial election. From 1996 until two months before his death, in 2016, he served as a Wisconsin circuit court judge in Iowa County, Wisconsin; he was chief judge of the 7th Judicial Administrative District from 2007 to 2013.
Dyke received his bachelor's degree from DePauw University in Indiana.[1] While completing his degree at the University of Wisconsin Law School, he hosted Circus 3, a local children's television program on WISC-TV.[2] He also moderated Face the State, a local political news program modeled after the nationally televised Face the Nation. The program included interviews with Richard Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, Gerald Ford, John F. Kennedy and other prominent politicians.[3]
Dyke was a two-term mayor of Madison, Wisconsin from 1969 to 1973.[4] His tenure as mayor is considered a colorful and often controversial part of Madison's history.[5] Dyke presided over Madison during the most turbulent era in the city's history, highlighted by the Sterling Hall bombing and subsequent clashes with student uprisings.[4] One of those student activists, Paul Soglin, defeated Dyke's attempt for re-election in 1973.[4] [6] Undeterred, Dyke ran as the Republican nominee for governor in 1974, losing to Democrat Patrick Lucey.[4]
A conservative Republican, Dyke briefly left the party in 1976 to join Lester Maddox's American Independent Party presidential ticket as the vice presidential nominee; however, he disavowed Maddox's segregationist views. Maddox and Dyke won 170,274 votes in the general election (or 0.21% of votes).[7]
Following the end of his political career, Dyke opened a general contracting business in Mount Horeb, Wisconsin, and bred horses. He also worked as a family mediation lawyer in Mineral Point, Wisconsin.
On December 3, 1996, Governor Tommy Thompson appointed Dyke to the circuit court vacancy in Iowa County, created by the impending retirement of Judge James P. Fiedler.[4] [8] He was elected to a full term on the court in 1998 and subsequently re-elected in 2004 and 2010. He later was selected as the chief judge of the 7th Judicial Administrative District by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and served the maximum of three two-year terms in that role. Dyke left the bench in January 2016, and died of pancreatic cancer in a Dodgeville, Wisconsin, nursing home two months later.[4] [9] [10]
Dyke illustrated the children's book The General's Hat, or Why the Bell Tower Stopped Working, a tale written by Kay Price about two mice who get on the same ship with General Ulysses S. Grant on his travels to Galena, Illinois.[11]
| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| Primary Election, March 6, 1973| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, April 3, 1973
| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, November 3, 1974