It’s difficult to find information about the late William (Dan) Southall on the Internet, and that’s a shame. He was a brilliant student, artist and educator who stockpiled his own art in a humble way, leaving behind a collection that included ceramic sculptures, paintings, sketches and drawings.
Southall grew up in East Liverpool, in a house on Garfield Street that overlooked downtown, and began creating art pieces at a young age. According to an article published in The Review newspaper (written by Fred Miller for the Jan. 22, 2006 edition), Southall began entering art shows at the Cleveland Institute of Art as a young man in the mid-1940s and won awards for categories such as modeling, mechanical drawing, watercolor, life drawing, anatomy and sculpture.
He earned a diploma from the Cleveland School of Art in 1949; studied at the John Huntington Polytechnic Institute in Cleveland from 1946 to 1949; and attended the Cooper School of Art in Cleveland for six months in 1951.
In 1950, Southall graduated from Kent State University with a bachelor’s degree in education and worked as a substitute teacher in Cleveland from 1950 to 1951. He later studied at the University of Detroit and received a master’s degree in education from Wayne State University (Detroit) in 1966.
The art pieces were sold in the Tuskegee bookstore and at department stores in Birmingham and Montgomery, Alabama.
In 1958, Southall began a 21-year career as an art teacher in the Detroit public schools.
Throughout his life, he continued to create art while displaying his works in shows in Detroit, Atlanta, Cleveland and at the Kent State East Liverpool Campus. Some of his watercolors depicted scenes from the East Liverpool and Wellsville areas.
Southall died on May 28, 2004, in Detroit. It is reported that after his death, his family “hauled truckloads of artwork back from Detroit.”
According to the newspaper article cited above, the Southall family can trace its lineage back to ancestors who came to East Liverpool in the mid-1800’s and settled in the area now known as Glenmoor. The family home was once part of the Underground Railroad, helping slaves escape to Canada.
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Headline Photo: Southall art on display in Purinton Hall
Photo A: William Southall
Photo B: Southall art on display in the Mary Patterson Building