William Golden/Golding was born between 1809 and 1813 in Liberty County, GA, and was enslaved by Charles Colcock Jones. He was a leader in the slave community as an ordained Congregational Minister. He worked for the Freedmen’s Bureau after the Civil War and was active in the Georgia labor movement, attending the 1869 Georgia Labor Convention.
When expelled from the Georgia Assembly in 1868, Golden “stormed out of a committee meeting, promising that the blacks would hold their seats at the point of a bayonet of necessary” (Drago, 52)
He was reinstated to the Georgia Assembly in 1870 and served 4 terms. Because Golden was enslaved for the majority of his life, he was only able to read and write a little like some of his other formerly enslaved elected colleagues. Because of this, Golden worked to further education for Black students. He established Golden’s School in 1866 in Midway, Georgia, on land deeded to him. The school was expanded from a small schoolhouse and became Dorchester Academy in 1872. Equipped with a campus farm, the students and staff raised and sold livestock, eggs, and chickens to pay operational expenses.

The school transitioned into a center for civil rights in the 20th century. Dr. Martin Luther King, Dr. Ralph Abernathy, Andrew Young, and Dr. Fred Shuttlesworth prepared the March on Birmingham at the school. The school is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a featured stop on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail in Georgia.
Golden died in Liberty County, Georgia.








