Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Hugh Dorsey

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Preceded by
  
Nathaniel E. Harris

Religion
  
Methodist

Party
  
Democratic Party

Political party
  
Democratic

Name
  
Hugh Dorsey

Succeeded by
  
Thomas W. Hardwick

Alma mater
  
University of Georgia

Role
  
Lawyer

Resting place
  
Westview Cemetery

Occupation
  
Lawyer

Spouse
  
Adair Wilkinson (m. 1911)


Hugh Dorsey wwwjamesfortunecoukwpcontentuploads201308

Born
  
July 10, 1871 Fayetteville, Georgia (
1871-07-10
)

Died
  
June 11, 1948, Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Education
  
University of Virginia, University of Georgia

Matt whalen as hugh dorsey in parade audio only


Hugh Manson Dorsey (July 10, 1871 – June 11, 1948) was an American lawyer who was notable as the prosecuting attorney in the Leo Frank trial of 1913. He was also a politician, a member of the Democratic Party who was twice elected as the Governor of Georgia (1917–1921), and jurist, who served for more than a decade as a superior court judge (1935–1948) in Atlanta.

Contents

Hugh Dorsey Closing Argument of Hugh Dorsey Solicitor General for Atlanta Circuit

Early life and education

Hugh Dorsey was born in Fayetteville, Georgia in 1871. At the age of 8, he moved with his family in 1879 to Atlanta, which was growing rapidly and had more economic opportunity. His father was an attorney there.

Dorsey graduated from the University of Georgia in 1893. After studying law at the University of Virginia, Dorsey joined his father's law firm in Atlanta in 1895.

Marriage and family

Dorsey married Adair Wilkinson and had two children. Dorsey's sister, Sarah, married Luther Rosser Jr., son of attorney Luther Rosser, who was chief counsel defending Leo Frank at trial and subsequent appeals.

Career

After working for several years with his father, in 1910 Dorsey was appointed solicitor general of the Atlanta Judicial Circuit. He was a member of the Democratic Party, as were most established Whites in the South after Reconstruction. In 1913, Dorsey was prosecuting attorney (serving as the solicitor general of the Fulton County Superior Court) at the trial of Leo Frank, who was indicted for the murder of young factory worker Mary Phagan. Achieving conviction amid intense media coverage, Dorsey became famous. Frank, a Jewish northerner from Brooklyn, was eventually lynched by a mob two months after Governor John Slaton commuted his death sentence to life in prison.

Dorsey's victory in the Frank-Phagan case contributed to his political popularity and being elected for two consecutive two-year terms as the Governor of Georgia from 1917 to 1921.

Later he ran for the U.S. Senate but was defeated. Dorsey served as a superior court judge in Atlanta from 1935 until his death in 1948.

He is buried in Westview Cemetery in Atlanta.

Over the decades, the dramatic story of Frank's trial and lynching (after his death sentence was commuted) was adapted into many forms. He is seen in the 1964 fiction Profiles in Courage and 1988 TV-miniseries The Murder of Mary Phagan, where Dorsey was portrayed by the actor Richard Jordan, and in the Broadway musical Parade, where he was portrayed in the original cast by Herndon Lackey.

References

Hugh Dorsey Wikipedia