William Olin Burgin was a United States. Representative from North Carolina.
Education
Born on a farm near Marion, McDowell County, North Carolina, Burgin moved with his parents to Rutherfordton, North Carolina, where he attended the public schools and Rutherfordton Military Institute. He also attended the Law School of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Career
He engaged as a clerk in a general store in Rutherfordton in 1893 and later as a traveling salesman and merchant. He moved to Thomasville and engaged in the mercantile business. He was admitted to the Barometer
He served as mayor of Thomasville, North Carolina from 1906 to 1910.
He moved to Lexington, North Carolina, and continued the practice of law. He served as president and attorney of the Industrial Bank of Lexington.
He served as director in a number of business enterprises in Lexington. He served in the State house of representatives in 1931.
Burgin was elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-sixth and to the three succeeding Congresses and served from January 3, 1939, until his death in Washington, District of Columbia, on April 11, 1946.
He was interred in Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, North Carolina. A confidential 1943 analysis of the House Foreign Affairs Committee by Isaiah Berlin for the British Foreign Office described Burgin as "a meek, mild, homely figure who seldom makes his presence felt, but who has voted regularly for the President"s foreign policy measures. A typical southern Democrat.".
Membership
He served as member of the State senate in 1933.