Dawson set up a practice in Greensboro, where he was a successful jury lawyer. He was known for his ability to settle cases out of court.
In 1819, he married Henrietta M. Wingfield. They had eight children. His wife died in 1850. Dawson remarried in 1854 to Eliza M. Williams of Memphis, Tennessee.[2]
Dawson was elected as one of the vice presidents of the Alumni Society of the University of Georgia at its first meeting, on August 4, 1834.[3]
Political and military career
He was elected Clerk of the Georgia House of Representatives in 1821 and served twelve years in that post. From 1828, he compiled Dawson's Digest of Laws of Georgia, published in 1831.[4]
He was the Whig candidate for Governor of Georgia in 1841 but was defeated by Charles James McDonald. He thought his defeat as gubernatorial candidate meant that voters disapproved of his congressional service, particularly his vote earlier in the year to tax coffee and tea.[6] He resigned from Congress.
During his service in the United States House, Dawson chaired the Committee on Mileage (25th Congress), the Committee on Claims (26th Congress), and the Committee on Military Affairs (27th Congress).
He was appointed by Governor George W. Crawford to fill a vacancy as Judge of the Ocmulgee Circuit Court in 1845, but he declined to run as a candidate for the bench at the completion of his term.
Dawson was elected by the state legislature in November 1847[7] as the Whig candidate for Georgia's Class 3 seat in the United States Senate for the 31st, 32nd, and 33rd Congresses, serving from March 4, 1849, to March 3, 1855. Dawson supported the compromises that preserved the union in 1850.[8][9] He chaired the Committee on Private Land Claims (32nd Congress) and presided over the Southern convention at Memphis in 1853.
He was twice a delegate to the convention to amend the U.S. Constitution.[6]
Freemason
Dawson was initiated to the Scottish Rite Freemasonry at the "San Marino" Lodge No. 34, Greensboro, GA.[10][11][12] He was elected Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons in Georgia on November 8, 1843[13] and served in that capacity until his death in 1856.[14] While in Congress, he was active in local Freemasonry. The Dawson Lodge in Washington, D.C.[15] and the Dawson Lodge in Social Circle, Georgia were named for him.[16][17]
Death and legacy
Dawson died in Greensboro on May 5, 1856, and was buried in Greensboro Cemetery with Masonic rites following a service in the Presbyterian church. A historical sign was placed in his honor in Greensboro.[18]
Because of his elegant manners, he was called "the first gentleman of Georgia" by Joseph Henry Lumpkin.[19]
Joshua Reed Giddings described him: "He was a man of much suavity of manner; one of that class of
Southern statesmen who felt it necessary to carry every measure by the influence of personal kindness, and an expression of horror at all agitation of the slave question, under the apprehension that it might
dissolve the Union."[20]
Dawson County, Georgia, and the county seat, Dawsonville, were named for William Crosby Dawson.[21] The county was created by a legislative act on December 3, 1857, primarily out of Lumpkin County and small parts of Gilmer, Pickens and Forsyth counties. Dawson, the county seat of Terrell County, Georgia was incorporated on December 22, 1857, and named for William Crosby Dawson.[22]
^Hamilton, Holman (2015). Prologue to Conflict : The Crisis and Compromise of 1850. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. p. 108. ISBN9780813158310.
American National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Mellichamp, Josephine. "William Dawson." In Senators From Georgia, pp. 127–30. Huntsville, Ala.: Strode Publishers, 1976. ISBN0-87397-082-9