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Senate Years of Service: 1807-1813 Party: Democratic Republican
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CRAWFORD, William Harris, a Senator from Georgia; born in Nelson County, Va., February 24, 1772; moved
with his father to Edgefield District, S.C., in 1779 and to Columbia County, Ga., in 1783; pursued
classical studies in a private school and in Richmond Academy, Augusta, Ga.; studied law; admitted
to the bar and commenced practice in Lexington, Ga., in 1799; appointed to prepare a digest of the
laws of Georgia in 1799; member, State house of representatives 1803-1807; elected to the United
States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Abraham Baldwin and served from November
7, 1807, to March 23, 1813, when he resigned; served as President pro tempore of the Senate during
the Twelfth Congress; declined appointment as Secretary of War under President James Madison in
1813; Minister to France 1813-1815; returned home to act as agent for the sale of the land donated
by Congress to Lafayette; appointed Secretary of War by President Madison in August 1815;
transferred to the Treasury in October 1816, and served under Presidents Madison and James
Monroe until 1825; unsuccessful Democratic Republican candidate for President of the United States
in 1824; due to illness refused the tender of President John Quincy Adams that he remain Secretary of
the Treasury; returned to Georgia and was appointed judge of the northern circuit court in 1827, which
position he held until his death in Oglethorpe County, Ga., September 15, 1834; interment on his
estate, Woodlawn, near Crawford, Oglethorpe County, Ga.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Green, Philip. The Life of William Crawford. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1965; Mooney, Chase. William H.
Crawford, 1772-1834. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1974.
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