William Yates Atkinson Explained

William Yates Atkinson
Order:55th Governor of Georgia
Term Start:October 27, 1894
Term End:October 29, 1898
Predecessor:William J. Northen
Successor:Allen D. Candler
Birth Name:William Yates Atkinson
Birth Date:11 November 1854
Birth Place:Meriwether County, Georgia, U.S.
Death Place:Newnan, Georgia, U.S.
Resting Place:Oak Hill Cemetery
Party:Democratic Party

William Yates Atkinson (November 11, 1854 – August 8, 1899) was an American politician who served as the governor of the U.S. state of Georgia from 1894 to 1898.

Early life

Atkinson was born in the Oakland community in Meriwether County, Georgia, on November 11, 1854. He graduated from the University of Georgia with an LL.B in 1877. He married Susan Cobb Milton, granddaughter of Florida Governor John Milton,[1] in 1880.

Political life

After graduating from the University of Georgia, Atkinson began practicing law in Newnan. Atkinson was the solicitor of the Coweta Superior Court circuit. He then represented Coweta County as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives (1886–94), where he was the speaker, or presiding officer, during the last two years. As a state representative, he introduced a bill that established the Georgia Normal and Industrial College, which later became Georgia College and State University in Milledgeville, Georgia. He was also the Georgia Democratic Party state chair from 1890 to 1892.Atkinson won the 1894 election and was elected Governor of Georgia. He was reelected to a second term in 1896.[2] During his administration, he hired the first woman salaried employee in state government, Helen Dortch, as assistant state librarian. In 1897, he vetoed a law that would have prohibited football in the state, due in part to an impassioned letter from Rosalind Burns Gammon, whose son's death had initiated the anti-football legislation.[3] He was vehement in his opposition to the practice of lynching.[4]

Atkinson was mentioned by William Henry Holtzclaw, later founder of Utica Institute in Mississippi, as giving him the money he needed to go back to Tuskegee Institute for college - as well as a kindly lecture on the advisability of staying out of politics.[5]

After his two terms as governor, Atkinson bravely confronted the mob in the infamous Sam Hose lynching and tried to get them to allow the legal justice system to take its course.[6] He was unsuccessful, however, and Hose was lynched soon after Atkinson confronted the mob.

Death and legacy

Atkinson died on August 8, 1899, at the age of 44. He is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Newnan. Atkinson County, Georgia, is named for him.

His son, William Yates Atkinson Jr., was the Georgia Democratic state chair in 1942 as well as a Georgia state Supreme Court justice from 1943 to 1948.

Atkinson Hall, on the campus of Georgia College and State University, is named for him.[7]

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ham. Henry Wilkes Jones. Representative Georgians. Biographical sketches of men now in public life. 1887. Morning News Print. Savannah. 191. William Yates Atkinson.. June 18, 2016.
  2. Web site: William Yates Atkinson. National Governors Association. June 18, 2016.
  3. Web site: Von Gammon . Georgia Info . Digital Library of Georgia . May 14, 2012.
  4. Book: Arnold. Edwin T.. What virtue there is in fire : cultural memory and the lynching of sam hose.. 2012. Univ Of Georgia Press. Athens. 978-0820340647. 99.
  5. Book: Holtzclaw. William H.. The Black Man's Burden. 1915. 58. New York, The Neale Publishing company.
  6. Book: Thurston. Robert W.. Lynching : American mob murder in global perspective. 2011. Ashgate. Farnham, Surrey, England. 978-1409409083. 118.
  7. Web site: Atkinson Hall (Georgia College & State University). Digital Library of Georgia. June 18, 2016.