William Cornelius Dixon (July 1, 1904 – January 10, 1997) was an American government antitrust lawyer who had a two-month term as a justice of the Ohio Supreme Court in 1938.
[1] He was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1928, working as an associate at Holiday, Grossman and McAfee in Cleveland from 1928 to 1932.
He won election November 8 of that year to the unexpired term on the Ohio Supreme Court of Thomas A. Jones, who had died.
He returned to private practice in 1954 in Los Angeles, and was assistant Attorney General for antitrust enforcement in California from 1959 to 1963.
[1] Dixon died January 10, 1997, in San Diego, California, and is interred at Whitehaven Park in Cleveland.