Background
Williamson was born in the now ghost town of Salem in Benton County, one of the six northernmost counties of Mississippi.
politician member of the Louisiana State Senate
Williamson was born in the now ghost town of Salem in Benton County, one of the six northernmost counties of Mississippi.
In 1897, Norris Williamson received his Bachelor of Science degree from Mississippi State University in Starkville, an institution then only seventeen years old.
Brooks, who resided near Lake Providence, represented the delta parishes: Tensas, Madison, East Carroll, and Concordia, a rich farming region along the Mississippi River. He represented Vidalia, Ferriday, Saint Joseph, and Tallulah. At the time, two state senators represented the four-parish district.
On July 4, 1897, he relocated to East Carroll Parish in far northeastern Louisiana to become a contractor in the construction of levees along the Mississippi River.
In 1904, he purchased the Owenton Plantation. In 1920, he closed the construction business to devote full-time to the 4,000-acre Wilton Plantation, where he produced cotton, cattle, and grains.
The historically black Union Baptist Church Number. 1 was built on Williamson lands in 1928.
In 1918, at age of forty-two, Senator Williamson married Sally Cooke (1887-1976), daughter of H. Brent Cooke and the former Rachel Wilson of Louisville, Kentucky.
In 1923, he worked to organize the Louisiana and the American cotton cooperative associations. Williamson co-founded and served on the executive committee of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives. In 1928, he and Sally adopted a seven-year-old daughter, Norris Williamson, who later married Joseph Lawrence Brock.
Norris Brock died in 1948 at the age of twenty-seven, a year before her father"s passing.
In 1944, twelve years after Williamson"s Senate tenure ended, Progressive Farmer magazine declared him "Manitoba of the Year" because of his service to agriculture. From 1912 to 1916, Williamson was the president of the East Carroll Parish Police Jury, the governing body of the parish, akin to county commissions in most other states.
He left the police jury upon his election to the state Senate. As the chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, As a freshman senator, Williamson in 1917 introduced a bill calling for state funding for the eradication of the cattle tick pest, and it was signed into law by Governor Ruffin Pleasant.
Williamson supported woman"s suffrage through ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
He was an alternate delegate to the 1940 Democratic National Convention, which nominated the Roosevelt-Wallace ticket. The Louisiana delegation was led by then Governor Sam Houston Jones, the leader of the anti-Long faction. Williamson served alongside Senator Clifford Cleveland Brooks, a planter from Saint Joseph in Tensas Parish.
Williamson was an unwavering conservative and an unyielding critic of Governor Huey Pierce Long, Junior.
Williamson retired to private life in 1932, rather than face likely defeat at the hands of the Longites, and his seat passed to Andrew L. Sevier of Tallulah, who remained in the post until his death in 1962. Brooks was unseated in 1932 by the banker Daniel B. Fleming of Ferriday in Concordia Parish.
Whereas Williamson had refused to compromise with the Long faction and retired from politics, Brooks ran again, equivocated in his last campaign regarding Longism and disappointed some of his original supporters who felt that he had not stood by his principles. Brooks was unseated, even the loser to Fleming in his own Tensas Parish.
In 1922, he joined others in the organization of the Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation and was a member of the original board of directors. Williamson was a member of the Masonic lodge.