Edward Clarence Wall (August 11, 1843 – April 25, 1915), was an American grain commission merchant and Democratic Party politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Returning to Wisconsin he finished his education at Racine College, and, in 1861, entered his father's general commission business as a retail clerk.
In 1877 the firm of Wall & Bigelow was formed, which, for years, did an extensive grain commission and freight forwarding business.
Wall was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly for the First Milwaukee County Assembly district (First Ward of the City of Milwaukee) as a Democrat in 1877 (incumbent James Greeley Flanders, also a Democrat, was not a candidate for re-election), winning 691 votes to 505 for Republican Carl Doerflinger and 30 for Greenbacker George B. Goodwin.
In January, 1892, he was appointed by the Democratic National Committee as one of its members, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John L. Mitchell.
[3] Wall was a political ally of Bourbon Democrat leaders like William Freeman Vilas, and profited by the alliance.