Very little is known about William Pierce's early life. He was probably born
in Georgia in 1740, but he grew up in Virginia. During the Revolutionary War
Pierce acted as an aide-de-camp to Gen. Nathanael Greene and eventually attained
the rank of brevet major. For his conduct at the battle of Eutaw Springs,
Congress presented him with a ceremonial sword.
The year Pierce left the army, 1783, he married Charlotte Fenwick of South
Carolina. They had two sons, one of whom died as a child. Pierce made his home
in Savannah, where he engaged in business. He first organized an import-export
company, Pierce, White, and Call, in 1783, but it dissolved less than a year
later. He made a new start with his wife's dowry and formed William Pierce &
Company. In 1786 he was a member of the Georgia House of Representatives and was
also elected to the Continental Congress.
At the Constitutional Convention Pierce did not play a large role, but he
exerted some influence and participated in three debates. He argued for the
election of one house of the federal legislature by the people and one house by
the states; he favored a 3-year term instead of a 7-year term in the second
house. Because he agreed that the Articles had been insufficient, he recommended
strengthening the federal government at the expense of state privileges as long
as state distinctions were not altogether destroyed. Pierce approved of the
resulting Constitution, but he found it necessary to leave in the middle of the
proceedings. A decline in the European rice market adversely affected his
business. Soon after he returned to Savannah he went bankrupt, having "neither
the skill of an experienced merchant nor any reserve capital." Only 2 years
later, on December 10, 1789, Pierce died in Savannah at age 49 leaving
tremendous debts.
Pierce's notes on the proceedings of the convention were published in the
Savannah Georgian in 1828. In them he wrote incisive character sketches that are
especially valuable for the information they provide about the lesser-known
delegates.