William Preston Moss (Jackson, Tennessee, April 26, 1897 – Jackson, Tennessee, December 25, 1985) was an American lawyer and politician. He was a member of the Tennessee State Senate from 1933 to 1937, serving as Speaker of the Senate in the 1936-7 session.

Early life edit

Moss' parents were William Mortimer Moss (1839–1929) and Mary Peyton (Randolph) Moss (1861–1933). After serving in the army in World War I as a corporal, he attended Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee and graduated with a BA and LLB in 1921. He immediately set up a law practice in Jackson.

Career edit

Moss served as the Jackson city attorney from 1925 to 1943. A Democrat, he was elected to two terms in the Tennessee State Senate, serving from 1933 to 1937, and was elected speaker for the 1936-7 session. (In Tennessee, the speaker of the senate is second in line for the governorship, similar to the lieutenant governor in other states.) In 1937-8 he served as a special judge on the Court of Appeals. From 1943-5 he was the president of the Jackson-Madison Bar Association. In 1953 he served as a member of a constitutional convention to revise the constitution. Moss was the chairman of the Tennessee Bar Association 1960-1. In 1963 he was appointed to the newly constituted Law Revision Commission.[1]

Personal life edit

Moss married Lutitia Saxon Myers (1914–1995) on June 29, 1935; they had 4 children, William Preston Moss, Jr. (1936–1997), Michael Durham Moss (1938– ), John Ramsey Moss (1941–2011), Mary Lutitia Pettigrew (19??– ).

References edit