William Mackenzie Davidson
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William Mackenzie Davidson (December 1857 - January 18, 1930) was a planter, politician, and civic figure in St. Joseph, Louisiana, the seat of government of Tensas Parish, one of the Mississippi River delta parishes with majority African American populations, rich in farming, and susceptible to periodic flooding. Background Davidson was born to Scottish immigrants in New York City. As a child, he was brought to Natchez, Mississippi, where he later attended nearby Jefferson Military Academy. He then relocated to Waterproof in southern Tensas Parish. Despite Davidson's northern birth, his father had fought for the Confederacy in the American Civil War. In 1878, Davidson himself was among the approximately one hundred white posse members who joined parish judge and later State Senator Charles C. Cordill in crushing by force a revolt of African American resistance to the segregated order, imposed despite the Fifteenth Amendment. From this incident, Davidson was arrested and carried to New Orleans to stand trial on fraud charges, but the case was suspended. In 1880, at the age of twenty-four, Davidson moved the short distance north to St. Joseph and became a merchant and planter. He married Carrie Moore (1866-1957), daughter of Joseph Moore, one of the wealthiest men in Tensas Parish. He moved with comfort and ease into the circle of the Tensas elite. Political and civic affairs Davidson was a founder and the general manager of the powerful Panola Company, an agricultural entity based in St. Joseph which controlled at one point eleven thousand acres of valuable farmland. J. H. Netterville supervised three of its most valuable holdings, the Balmoral, Blackwater, and Wyoming plantations. As the office of mayor in such small communities was and remains part-time, Davidson was also the Tensas Parish treasurer for some three decades. was killed in action in France shortly before the armistice ending World War I, then known as The Great War. Lieutenant Davidson was a graduate of Culver Military Academy in Indiana, the University of Michigan, and the George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C., where he also was a staff member for U.S. Senator Joseph E. Ransdell of Lake Providence, a foremost spokesman for delta interests. Citizens in 1926 named the high school in St. Joseph in Davidson's honor. Nearly all African Americans of school age are enrolled in public schools, which have struggled financially and with weak pupil performance for many years. Mayor Davidson's accidental death In January 1930, some eleven years after his son's death, Davidson died from an accidental fall. He slipped on an icy patch of sidewalk outside his office, fell, and fractured his skull. He was carried into his Bank of St. Joseph, of which he was the president, and there he lapsed into unconsciousness and died a few minutes later. Davidson's sudden demise brought an outpouring of emotion from all races and classes, "on every face of every color of every age," as the editor of the Tensas Gazette described the tragedy. A. H. Jackson, then the principal of the all-black Tensas Parish Training School in St. Joseph, later known as Tensas Rosenwald High School, described Davidson as "always straightforward, full of advice and sympathy," and supportive of "movements which he felt were good for all the people irrespective of race or color."
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