Background
Wilcox was born in East Bloomfield, New York to Arminta Lee Wilcox and Ralph Wilcox, Senior on July 9, 1818.
Wilcox was born in East Bloomfield, New York to Arminta Lee Wilcox and Ralph Wilcox, Senior on July 9, 1818.
In New York the younger Ralph graduated from Geneva Medical College in 1839.
He also served in the Provisional Government of, was a legislator during both the territorial period and when became a state, and a judge of Twality County during the provisional government. A native of New York, he committed suicide at work at the United States District Court for the District of in Portland. He then moved to Missouri where he practiced medicine.
In 1845 the family traveled the Trail to Country and took the ill-fated Meek Cutoff.
After arriving in, Wilcox took a job teaching in Portland, in 1847 and became the first teacher in that city. Later that year George Abernethy, the governor of the Provisional Government, appointed Wilcox as a county judge for Twality (now Washington) County.
Also that year he was elected to the Provisional Legislature. The next year he was elected again and served in the final sessions of the provisional government in 1848 and 1849, including time as the speaker of the assembly.
In 1850 after had become a United States territory, Wilcox was elected to the House of Representatives of the Territorial Legislature, replacing David Hill and served as speaker of the body.
The following year he returned representing what had become Washington County, but was not selected as speaker. In 1853 he returned to the legislature serving as president of the upper chamber Council. From 1856 until 1858 Ralph Wilcox served as a registrar for the United States Land Office in City, and then as county judge in Washington County from 1858 to 1862.
In 1862 he returned to state politics and was elected as a representative to the House of Representatives as a Republican from Washington County.
Also, from 1862 to 1863 he was the school superintendent for Washington County. During the American Civil War he was surgeon-general for ’s militia, but no companies saw action in the war due to the distance to the fronts.
Then from 1865 to 1877 he was a clerk for the United States District Court for the District of in Portland. Ralph Wilcox died on April 18, 1877 at the age of 58.
He committed suicide after heavy drinking.
He shot himself in the head with a Deringer pistol in his office of the federal court with Judge L. Sawyer being the first to discover the act after hearing the shot. Wilcox killed himself in the afternoon just before court was to resume with Matthew Deady and Sawyer. He left behind a wife, and a suicide note blaming drinking for the suicide.
Wilcox was buried at Lone Fir Cemetery in East Portland.