William Lane Ezzard, Judge, 11th, 13th and 19th Mayor of Atlanta

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William Lane Ezzard, Judge, Mayor of Atlanta Ga.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Abbeville, Abbeville County, South Carolina, United States
Death: March 24, 1887 (87)
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, United States
Place of Burial: Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of William Ezzard and Sophia Lane Ezzard
Husband of Sarah Sophie Ezzard
Partner of Nellie Calhoun
Father of Moses Calhoun; Sinai Catherine Murray; John F. Ezzard; William Lane Ezzard, Judge; Carnelia Smith and 1 other

Managed by: Elyse Vahjen
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About William Lane Ezzard, Judge, 11th, 13th and 19th Mayor of Atlanta

Birth: Jun. 12, 1799 Abbeville Abbeville County South Carolina, USA Death: Mar. 24, 1887

Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, 1856-1858, 1860-1861, and 1870-1871.

Family links:

Spouses:
 Nellie Reynolds Calhoun (1810 - 1897)*
 Sarah Sophia Lane Ezzard (1811 - 1878)*
Children:
 Sinai Catherine Calhoun Webb (1830 - 1903)*
 John F. Ezzard (1830 - 1866)*
 William Lane Ezzard (1834 - 1903)*
 Carnelia Ezzard Smith (1834 - 1889)*
 Mary Ella Ezzard Anderson (1846 - 1870)*
  • Calculated relationship

Burial: Oakland Cemetery Atlanta Fulton County Georgia, USA Plot: Section 8 Lot 208 Grave 10

Virtual Cemetery info

Maintained by: Find A Grave Originally Created by: Garver Graver Record added: Dec 02, 2009 Find A Grave Memorial# 45044502 William E. Ezzard (June 12, 1799 – March 24, 1887) was a Southern United States politician who served as the 11th, 13th and 19th Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, in the 19th century.

Ezzard was born in Abbeville, South Carolina. He moved to Georgia and later represented Elbert County, Georgia, in the Georgia Legislature. He was twice elected as a state senator from that district. After a full term as judge of the Coweta circuit, he settled in Decatur in 1822, being one of the first settlers in DeKalb County. He was again sent to the legislature.[1]

In 1826 DeKalb County Academy was founded and the next year, Ezzard, as well as Judge Reuben Cone and nine others, were named as trustees in the incorporation.[2] In 1827, at the age of 28, he was sent to the Georgia state senate from DeKalb County.

He served as Solicitor General of the Cherokee Circuit from December 8, 1832, to December 1835. Then he was brigadier general of the First Brigade, 11th Division, in the Georgia militia.[3] He resigned in November 1840 and was Judge of the old Coweta Circuit from November 6, 1840, until November 1844. While in that office, he administered the estate of Hardy Ivy and was responsible for subdividing his estate comprising land lot 51.[4]

Ezzard moved to Atlanta in 1850, where he was a law partner to Judge John Collier and operated a dry goods and drug store Smith & Ezzard.[5] He co-founded the Atlanta Bank in 1852 with John Mims, Clark Howell, Sr., Jonathan Norcross, Richard Peters, William Butt, Lemuel Grant, Joseph Winship, N.L. Angier, Joseph Thompson and other investors.[6]

He served three one-year terms as mayor in 1856, 1857 (this was the first time consecutive terms had been served by any mayor. His term included him visiting Charleston, where Atlanta was named the Gate City)[7]) and finally in 1860.

In 1861, he was defeated for a fourth term by Whitaker by the count of 695 votes to 452. He was then a delegate to the Southern Congress, principally in the failed effort to secure the Confederate capitol at Atlanta. During the American Civil War, he represented Atlanta in the Georgia General Assembly house from 1863 to 1865, where he offered a bill to raise soldiers pay to $25 per month (which was passed). Coincidentally, one son, John F. Ezzard, died as a soldier at the age 33 in October 1864.

After the war, he continued his law firm with William Hulsey, and Judge Ezzard defeated Republican William Markham 819 to 762 when he served as mayor for his fourth and last time in 1870. In 1878 he was elected as tax receiver for Fulton County.

He made his home on the future site of the Piedmont Hotel on Forsyth Street.[8] In April 1871, Ezzard joined fellow pioneers to found the Atlanta Pioneer and Historic Society, of which he was voted president with Jonathan Norcross as vice president.[9]

He was buried at Oakland Cemetery in the family lot, but the grave was not marked. He is remembered by Ezzard Street in the southern section of the Old Fourth Ward.

Another son, William Lane Ezzard, co-founded the Gate City Guard in 1855. He died in 1903.

His granddaughter Catherine (daughter of Ezzard's biracial daughter Sinai Calhoun Webb, born a slave in 1830), married Antoine Graves, a prominent black realtor and educator in Atlanta.[10]

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William Lane Ezzard, Judge, 11th, 13th and 19th Mayor of Atlanta's Timeline

1799
June 12, 1799
Abbeville, Abbeville County, South Carolina, United States
1829
1829
Newnan, Coweta County, Georgia, United States
1830
1830
Georgia, United States
1830
Coweta County, Georgia, United States
1834
August 1834
Georgia, United States
November 30, 1834
1846
1846
Georgia, United States
1887
March 24, 1887
Age 87
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, United States