William F. Vilas (born July 9, 1840, Chelsea, Vermont, U.S.—died August 27, 1908, Madison, Wisconsin) was an American educator and politician who was a leader of the U.S. Democratic Party in the late 19th century and a member of President Grover Cleveland’s cabinet.
Vilas was born in Vermont and grew up in Wisconsin. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin (Madison) in 1858 and studied at the law school of the University of Albany (New York). Before he could begin a legal career, however, the Civil War erupted. Vilas joined a volunteer regiment in which he eventually rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel.
At the end of his military service, Vilas returned to Madison, where he became a law professor and a leader in the state Democratic Party. In 1884 he served as chairman of the convention that nominated Grover Cleveland for president. Following Cleveland’s election, Vilas joined the cabinet as postmaster general. He soon became a close adviser and friend to the president.
In 1888 Vilas was named to head the Department of the Interior. When Cleveland lost his reelection bid that year, Vilas returned to Madison and to his teaching position at the law school. In 1891 he resumed his political career and was elected by the state legislature to a seat in the U.S. Senate. A conservative “Gold” Democrat, Vilas supported the Cleveland administration’s economic policies and tried to block the nomination of William Jennings Bryan as the Democratic candidate for president in 1896.
Vilas retired from politics in 1897 and devoted most of his remaining years to the University of Wisconsin, to which he left a substantial portion of his large estate.