William Ramsay was born on Christmas Day 1846 in Monroe County, Iowa. The next year the family traveled the Oregon Trail and settled near the town of Newberg in Oregon Country. Arriving in the fall of 1847, William's parents Susan Shuck and David Ramsey homesteaded on the same site as Ewing Young's former mill. William was the youngest of five children in the family when they moved to Oregon, though his parents would have nine more children. He was schooled in the localpublic schools before attending and graduating from McMinnville College. William read law in Yamhill County and passed the bar, becoming a lawyer in 1868. Two years later he married Mahala A. Harris with whom he would father four children.
Legal career
In 1870, William was elected as the county judge for Yamhill County. He then practiced law in Lafayette, Oregon for ten years including for a time as a law partner with Benjamin F. Bonham, the two were partners from 1876 until 1885. From 1883 to 1888 Ramsey served as the first dean for Willamette UniversityCollege of Law in Salem, Oregon, where he was in charge of a staff of three professors. While in Salem he also served as mayor before moving to east to Pendleton, Oregon, and La Grande, Oregon, and then settling again in McMinnville, Oregon, where he served two terms as mayor. On June 3, 1913, Oregon GovernorOswald West appointed Ramsey and fellow former Willamette Law dean Charles L. McNary to the state supreme court bench when the court expanded from five to seven justices. Ramsey, a Democrat, ran for re-election in 1914, but lost to Lawrence T. Harris. Both McNary and Ramsey left the court at the end of the term on January 4, 1915.
Family
William's son Frederick served as a captain in the United States Navy aboard the Battleship Oregon. After his first wife died William married Julia A. Snyder in 1896, and they would have one daughter. William Marion Ramsey died on September 15, 1937, at the age of 79 and was buried in McMinnville at a funeral attended by several Oregon Supreme Court justices including Henry J. Bean, John O. Bailey, John L. Rand, and Percy R. Kelly. Willamette University's law school holds an annual lecture in his honor.