Thursday, August 15, 2013

Waymon Putnam Williams



 
Waymon Putnam Williams Sr.

l to r: brothers Scott and Waymon Putnam Williams.



WAYMON PUTNAM WILLIAMS
bio by his daughter, Marguerite Williams Blackwelder

Waymon was born to Henry Clinton Williams and Angeline Frances Putman on February 26, 1893 at the Medina River place or the Pleasanton Road property. He was named for his uncle Wayman (with an "a") who fought in the Civil War, and died soon after, as a young man. The name has been carried down to the fourth Waymon Putnam Williams.

Wayman Williams, Born May 27, 1845, Died June 14, 1867, Aged 22 years & 18 d's.


He worked with his father until he was scheduled to be in the next draft during World War I, which ended before he was called.

Through mutual friends, he met and married Jennie Marie Collins on October 7, 1917 in San Antonio, where they lived until late summer of 1931 in the Los Angeles Heights area. They had four children: Virginia Ruth (Yantis), Waymon Putnam, Jr. (who was know as Doy in the Oak Island community), Marguerite Elizabeth Blackwelder, and Bernice Norris (Kinney).

When his work was ended with The Railway Express Company during the Depression, he went back to dairy farming when the family moved to Oak Island to a house on the Hummel place, about a half mile west of Oak Island Church and school for a year. After that, they moved to the Taft Ranch, way south off the Applewhite Road, where they lived for a short time before moving to a house on the Neil property near Neil and Pleasanton roads. 

He was well known as a good trainer of horses to saddle.  He enjoyed hunting and fishing, and was a good swimmer.  One night, while fishing with friends, in preparation for a big community fish fry on the Medina, he hooked a huge cat fish, hiding under an outcropping of rocky bank.  He eventually got in the water and wrestled it out with another man or two keeping the line taut. It is easy for me to remember as it was noted that it weighed forty-two pounds, one pound more than Bernice, who was six years old.

It was from the Neil Road place that Jennie Marie took the girls, and moved to San Antonio to live with her recently widowed and frail father.  To her worry and sorrow but understanding, Waymon, Jr. at 13 years, out of loyalty, chose to stay with his father. Waymon, Jr. and Marguerite attended Oak Island and Thelma schools, and the family attended Oak Island Methodist Church during those years. With middle and high schools too distant, and no transportation, Ruth lived with relatives and friends and went to schools in San Antonio during those years.

Those are the years of the life of my father with which I am familiar.  I do not know if he chewed tobacco when we lived in town, but know he did the years we lived in the country.  He and Waymon Jr. continued to live and farm in the area, and after he procured a pick up truck, he had a business of collecting milk from various farms and taking it to the Knowlton Creamery on Fredericksburg Road.  He came to see us occasionally, and Bernice and I spent a week with him during a couple of summers. (It was one of those summers, when visiting the Ralph Watson’s down the road that I saw and heard my first phonograph player.  They probably had numerous records but the one that amazed me was the one that played what seemed a child’s record, The Little Rock Candy Mountain.)

After about ten years after separating, Waymon and Jennie Marie divorced, and he married Mollie Schmidt. They bought and farmed land at Cibolo, where he died at home of a sudden heart attack on September 29, 1959. He is buried in Coker Cemetery, San Antonio.

He left numerous descendants, some of whom, with cousins have enjoyed researching their genealogies, and get together as often as possible.

By Marguerite E. Williams Blackwelder    August 2009

Waymon Putnam Williams at a birthday party

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Jennie Marie Collins Williams





Biography by her daughter, Marguerite

Jennie Marie was a brave, intelligent and stout hearted Christian who had a great sense of humor, took responsibility seriously.  Family and friends were her main interests and joy. She was really good at keeping up with both those segments of her life as well as having an avid interest in politics and current events.  She was the main source of knowledge of the Collins lines as well as the Williams.  Though we were able to tell her that we found her great grandmother Mercy Hutchinson and family listed in a book on a shelf in the Concord, New Hampshire State Library, we did not learn in time for her and her brothers to know that they descended from auspicious ancestors going back through English, Spanish and French royalty to the Norman Invasion, Magna Carta, Bosworth Field and Charlemagne.  From all those to being born in the small pioneer town of Johnson City in the Texas Hill Country seems quite remarkable.

She was born during the depression of 1893, and lived harshly through the Great Depression of the 1930's when her marriage was falling apart, living anxiously through World War I when her brother Harry fought in the  trenches, and later, not knowing where her son Waymon, Jr. was due to carefully kept military secrets during WWII.  Through all those events, she bore and brought up four children in frequently near primitive circumstances.

Jennie (Sis or Aunt Sis to most of her family) was the first of four children, born Thursday November 2nd, 1893 to Minnie Beulah Wallis and James Aaron Collins in Johnson City, Blanco County, Texas. Minnie was 23 years and James (Jim) was 32.  They were married on July 17, 1892.  Minnie and Jim owned their house in Johnson City.  His mother Mercy Hutchinson Jones Collins and his half brother Dexter Riley Jones lived with them.  His other half brother Henry and his wife Emma lived nearby.  His half sister Emma Isabel (Emma Belle) Jones Holcomb was mostly away with her husband John Holcomb, as she traveled and spoke on behalf of The Women's Temperance League.

Jennie said she was told that when a baby, she cried night and day with colic.  Falling out of bed and landing on her broken glass nursing bottle, she led two generations of Collins family members who experienced scars from lips being cut as children.  It became sort of a wry family joke.

Similar to the 1930's, because people were allowed to buy on credit too long in the panic of 1893, the drug store Jim ran went broke.  He then worked at the post office for a short time. Because of his fine hand writing, he was frequently asked to write legal documents.  When the family moved from Johnson City to Rockport when she was 1 to 1 1/2, she assumed they went by wagon. When they moved from Rockport to Beeville in 1895, she, mother and father went by train while Dexter drove the wagon and team carrying some of their belongings.

Jim worked as a carpenter, painter and paper hanger in Beeville and Pettus, work he did well the rest of his life.  From this we see from the time of Jennie's arrival in November of 1893 until Harry was born 14 October 1895 in Beeville, they had made two long distance moves.  While living in Beeville, Mother, Granny and Grandmother Mercy  watched from their front porch as two soldiers in army blue walked along the street, returning from the Spanish American War.

They had moved to Burnet by the time their other two sons were born—James Roy, September 19, 1900 and Samuel Wallis, June 15, 1906—where they lived until they moved to 338 Chicago Blvd. in San Antonio in 1913.

Jennie Marie, San Antonio 1913.

 Mother had a great memory and was a fine story teller who loved telling of their growing up in the country near Burnet, about personal encounters with wild cats, of her and her brothers swinging from heights on grape vines, and all sorts of adventures, one when Roy chased Harry under the house with scissors while their parents were away.  Mother and Harry often teased Roy to which he would turn his face toward the house and cry his loudest.  There was a time when Dexter or Henry avoided an encounter with desperados known to be in the area by hiding and listening to their horse hoofs approach and disappear. 

When she was nine and Harry was seven, her mother's friend Georgia Landrum, who became a life long family friend, taught them to read.  Mother loved learning. The family moved to Lampasas for a year so she could go to school and then back to Burnet where she attended a country elementary school that had three or four month terms.  In her early teens, she spent two school years with her Wallis grandparents in Johnson City. Behavior expectations were strict in that time, and by her grandfather being the County Judge, hers were especially so.

Then she moved back to Burnet where she attended and graduated from Robert E. Lee private high school.  From all this, it is easy to see her strong intent that we should graduate from high school, regardless of the difficulty caused by the depression and living in the country in the Oak Island area. During the two years we were out there, because of no transportation to a middle or high school, Ruth lived in town, first with Granny and Grand dad, with Aunt Katherine and Uncle Roy and then the Moore family.  More schooling was considered even better but all of us went to work and got further education as we could. 

Pat worked at Uncle Roy's gas station and drove a bus for The San Antonio Public Service Company before being drafted soon after the attack at Pearl Harbor. He served in the Corps of Engineers, first in Puerto Rico where his unit was to guard the Panama Canal from attack during the war in Europe. Then he was sent to Luzon in the Philippines to prepare for the invasion of Japan. Harry Truman was our hero.

Granny had a heart problem from having rheumatic fever about the time Harry was born, but lived through all the moves and had the two more children.  There was an African American community called The Colony out from Blanco where they bought small pieces of land and farmed.  A woman from there called Aunt Harriett worked for Granny. Granny did the sewing for the family which was a large factor since much clothing, even underwear, was made at home.  Mother did some laundry and cooking. She became one of the best cooks ever.  One of the saddest times for Mother was when Granny died unexpectedly while taking an afternoon nap on February 19, 1932.  It was so sad for her when life was already so difficult.  When they lived in the house Grand dad built on Mebane Street, it was known that Granny's Bible reading time was at ten in the morning.  Though there were two rocking chairs on the front gallery, as Grand dad called it, she frequently sat on a bench built on the right end of it.  There was a swing on the other end with honeysuckle growing on latticework surrounding it where we spent many hours, some of them shelling peas or snapping beans for lunch. There we were able to watch hummingbirds build nests that were about the size of a walnut in the vines and then tend their young.

The Wallis grandparents came to live with them in 1910 in Burnet.  Grandmother died a few months later on December 16, 1910.  When the family moved to 338 Chicago Blvd in southeast San Antonio by Christmas in 1913, Grandpa liked the Wyatt family that rented the farm and lived with them, as he did not want to live in a city.  The farm was later sold and he moved with the Wyatt's to their new place where he lived out his life.

Grand dad worked with a furniture store in town repairing and refinishing, and Mother worked at the telephone company, then on Travis Street, followed in that space by Maverick Clarke. They rode street cars to and from work.  Harry worked for Alter's Drug Store at South Alamo and Garden Streets (now St. Mary's Street) until he went into the army. Roy also worked for a drug store on S. Alamo Street.  Sam was a school boy.

After mother met the Jones and Priest neighbor girls and they all went to McKinley Avenue Methodist Church., their Sunday School class went to the Medina River in the Oak Island area for a few days of camping.  On one of the days, while out on horseback, Waymon and his father came upon the campers. All were introduced.  The Jones girls knew them because their Uncle "Dude" Jones was married to Waymon's maternal Aunt Becky Putnam.  On that Sunday, all the Williams family and a Watson family, on whose place they were camping, joined them and had a big dinner together. Soon after that, Scott Williams took mother to the movie (silent) a couple of times.

The next spring, Etta, Mother thought perhaps at Scott's prompting, wrote and invited her to spend a week-end with the family at the farm off the Pleasanton Road.  She accepted and while there, Waymon asked her if he could come see her, to which she agreed.  At 6'2" tall, he was at that time called a well made man: handsome, dressed nicely, had charm and spoke with enthusiasm in a low tone of voice.  Her parents liked him. He was living alone at a place he and his father rented near town to which they rode from the farm on a horse or in a buggy.  Then they traveled into town by street car.  They had parlor dates, went to Sunday School and church, and occasionally went to a movie.  Though he enjoyed a joke, he was not much of a tease.  (Bernice and Pat were teasers; Ruth and Marguerite were not.) Jennie did not go out to the Williams house again until after they married.

They were married on Sunday, October 7, 1917 at McKinley Avenue Methodist Church at 2 PM, Reverend Beal officiating.  Her attendants were in fall colors:  Etta Williams in dark blue, Edna Jones in gray and Marguerite Jones in maroon.  Granny Collins made Jenny's navy blue dress, in what was known then as the war style.  She wore a navy blue hat.  At 5' 7" tall, she weighed 115 pounds, had brunette hair, pretty blue eyes and fair skin.  Harry Collins was best man.

Waymon Putnam Williams and Jennie Marie Collins wedding photo, 1917.

Grandma Williams, Lizzie and Scott were at the party at the Collins home for the wedding party.  When leaving, Grandma Williams told the newlyweds to be sure and be on time for dinner the next day.  It was remembered that Grandma Williams said that God must have had a grudge against her in giving her the two daughters in law; mother and Aunt Irene, Scott's wife.

They spent their wedding night at the Collins home, then stayed out at the Williams place until late October when they could have possession of the house they leased about a mile toward town on Pleasanton Road for which they bought furniture.  Though there was no church there, they went to Sunday School at nearby Cassin. 

Jennie went to her parent’s house a week or two before Ruth was born on July 31, 1918.  As with their other three children, Dr. J. H. Bigger delivered her.  Jenny and Ruth stayed in town with her parents.  Since it was expected that Waymon would be taken in the next increment of the draft, he pastured some of his cattle and sold the rest of the herd before joining Jennie and Ruth, staying until the next March when  Ruth was eight months old.

The war had ended and they bought the house at 609 San Francisco Street in the newly built neighborhood of Los Angeles Heights in the northwest part of San Antonio. Some years later, for that area to be part of Interstate I 10, that house was moved, and still may exist.  Bernice knew a girl in high school who lived in it, and she regretted that she did not go to see it.  They brought their furnishings to the new house and got settled. Pat was born January 25, 1920. Mother spoke of Marguerite, born May 8, 1926 and Bernice August 7, 1928 being her second family, also born at that house.

Like most in that time, Jennie washed clothes on Monday in the backyard using an iron pot over a fire for white things and galvanized tubs, one for scrubbing them on a scrub board, one for rinsing and one for starching.  After the dry things were taken from the rows of clothes lines, those to be ironed were sprinkled and wrapped tightly to be ironed on Tuesday.  Shirts, dresses and pillow cases stayed cleaner and fresher if starched.

From my early memory, Pat must have liked playing in the new house construction sites.  He came limping home one day reporting that he had stepped on a nail, to meet mother's obvious consternation since he would need a tetanus shot to which they had already learned he was wildly allergic. Also he and Ruth built a fire too close to the garage, burning it a bit before mother could put it out.  They enjoyed going to nearby Martinez Creek and bringing crawdads home in a pail, to be found disgustingly days later.

Also, it was when living there that Ruth and Pat were playing hide and seek from the banister of our front porch with neighbor friends.  At two years old, I was standing near when two cars were being raced on the street.   The driver of one lost control, swung into our yard, hitting and throwing me about fifteen feet into a bed of cannas before coming to a stop after knocking out a sizeable foundation corner post of the house.  His speedometer was jammed at 55 mph.  He thought about leaving the scene but dad arrived home at that time and strongly convinced him to wait for the police.  Mother had been sitting on the porch, walked down the steps and around the car. When not seeing me, she feared I was under it. When found, I was unconscious but soon came awake with nothing broken. Mr. Zoeller, who lived across the street, ran to the scene with a bucket of water.

Also at about that time, Pat shot a BB that hit me near the eye.  Because of the dark mark, mother thought it went into the eye.  Uncle Harry happened by at that time and saw that it only hit the eyelid.  When mother spoke to Pat about shooting toward someone, his reply was that he shot at my feet but I sat down.  Poor mother.

As houses were built around them, families moved in and some became friends for life. Waymon had joined McKinley Avenue Church, so upon moving they joined the new Los Angeles Heights Methodist Church.  They bought a used Chevrolet touring car in 1925. Street cars ran along San Francisco Street so they had convenient transportation.  Waymon, working with his dad as a farmer and cattle man all his life and having a short temper like his mother and sister Etta, he evidently did not make a good transition to the structure of city employment. Because of the unusual occasion of our driving down to the farm at night, it has been my impression it was the time of his father's unexpected death on October 9, 1930.

They lost their wonderful house in foreclosure in 1930, and moved to a rental on Santa Barbara Street, where in time, to mother's complete fright,  he disappeared for a few days before being met on a San Antonio Street, not recognizing Aunt Thelma's father, whom he knew well. After some time of hospitalization and back home, the family moved in the fall of 1931 to a new three room house with no conveniences, no running water, indoor plumbing and no telephone near Oak Island church and school where Pat went for 5th grade,  Marguerite was five and Bernice three. Dad had evidently brought his pastured herd there and was dairy farming, being very short of money for feed.  It was in that time of despair that Granny Collins died on February 19, 1932.

By September of 1932, we and the herd had moved to the awful house on the Taft ranch down the deep sand Applewhite Road from where Pat and I rode a mule five miles to and from the two room Oak Island School. Pat was in sixth grade and I started first grade. The mule was very skittish of the infrequent passing motor vehicles, and with ears moving like antennae, picking up the sound, would leave the sandy road, going through weeds and brush as near barbed wire fences as possible with us hanging on, fighting limbs and bending as flat as possible under low limbs.

There was a cranky kerosene kitchen stove, no hot or cold running water, and a four foot tall cream separator stood in the middle of the kitchen.  The separator had about 100 metal discs through which milk was processed to extract the cream from which butter was hand churned to sell for 19 cents a pound to five or six customers on 18 mile trips to San Antonio.  The discs had to be thoroughly washed in water heated on the stove.  Soapy water was created from bars, no flakes, granules or Dawn; the same thing for laundry all those early years.

Mother made wonderful biscuits.  At that house, she put them in an iron Dutch oven (a deep pan with a cover).  When she heard Dad turning the cows out to pasture from being milked in the morning, she placed the oven in the coals of the fireplace.  By the time he came to the house and washed up, the biscuits were golden, fluffy and ready for breakfast.  Pat and I took some with molasses or honey to school for lunch.

As I found myself in first grade in the two room Thelma School after Christmas, we and the herd had moved to the even worse house known as the Neal place, on corner land that was at the intersection of Rockport and Pleasanton Roads.  Being so poor, misery, tension and explosive anger were the atmosphere there.  I do not know how it was arranged that one day, Uncle Harry and Uncle Roy arrived. Whether it was planned or decided at the time, it became apparent that Mother and we children were going to leave.  Though Mother pled with thirteen year old Pat to go with us, he appeared determined to stay with dad, and did so.  We left with the few things we had and went to live with Grand dad who needed mother's care but did not want us to be there.

When taking notes from her over some years, I asked if she could tell of her time of most despair, she said it was at this time, when she was sick with suspected pernicious anemia and went to apply for a job to the WPA. She was hired earning $30.00 a month in a noisy factory sewing men's overalls on heavy duty machines.  Later she earned $35.00 a month canning horsemeat to be distributed to those on welfare and maybe army mess halls. After preparing breakfast and lunches for all, in order to save four cents a day, she walked four blocks to the city limits on South Presa Street to ride two buses to and from work. The fare was five cents to ride within the city limits with a free transfer if the destination required riding another bus.  One could buy a nickel pass of six tickets for 25 cents; a good deal which gave her three round trips.

When on Mebane Street, she washed and ironed on Saturday and Sunday, always having a good Sunday dinner for us after we went to Sunday School and church. She then often walked a mile and a half in the evening to attend a church service.  Like most women at that time, she never drove a car so all her travels were with family, friends, on buses or by walking.

When Grand dad became an invalid sometime after having a botched prostate surgery, her brothers paid her $25.00 a month to stay home with him.  After we moved to Hermitage Court in early 1938, Grand dad died on November 5, 1938.  She went to work teaching at the Southton Boys School that was near Brooks Air Field, where she loved working with those children in trouble. After that, she worked in the office of the big welfare housing community of Alazan Court in southeast downtown San Antonio.

During WWII, when we lived on Adams Street and then on Olmos Drive, she worked at the San Antonio Arsenal, where she marveled and was quizzical about working with key-punch cards, the primitive beginnings of computers.

When she arrived at home, worrisomely for us, later than the usual time one afternoon, her arm was in a sling.  She told that it was broken when she fell on stairs at work.  She walked to a bus stop, got to Robert B. Green Charity Hospital, had it set, rode buses to our corner and walked the two and a half blocks to home.  Spencer did not swear in our company but after listening to her, he said, "Well I'll be damned."  All of us were at work.  Personal calls were not made or taken at work.  I doubt that any of us knew numbers where each worked.

Even if it was just up to the Hill Country with her brothers and their wives, she loved to travel.  Though I know she, dad, Ruth and Pat went to Sinton to see Aunt Georgie and Uncle Cooper Morrow one time, to my knowledge, she never went to the Texas coast.  She spent about four months with us when Blackie was stationed in Wiesbaden, Germany, and loved going to see Bernice, Kinney and family when they were stationed at Dayton, Ohio.

She had a very pretty voice, and would sing wonderful semi classical songs while in a rocking chair on the front porch or in the living room.  The last time I was with her in the nursing home, she recited the words of some hymns as well as some Shakespeare.  She was an avid and fast reader; reading being one of the joys and comforts of her life. Losing the sight of one eye from an infection while in the hospital after cataract surgery was such a devastating blow. She kept reading with the awful, thick glasses that were all that was available before implants were invented.  She read through her well worn Bible many times, taught adult Sunday School and volunteered in the office of her church.

Like most in her time, before antibiotics, she was a good and caring home doctor.  She rubbed our chests with Vicks, swabbed our sore throats with mercury chrome and gave us an aspirin dissolved in a teaspoon of water.  Good homemade tomato soup was the get well food.  One time when we had baby chickens that looked droopy, she sent me to the drug store to get permanganate of potash, a powder that she put in their water.  They perked up and lived.

The early deaths of Spencer and her brother Sam were shocking markers for all our family.

She took care of Spencer T. and Suzanne and the home while Ruth worked full time and went to college to get her teaching degree.  When she moved to an apartment when Ruth and Craig Marshall married in 1962, being distressed she had to be away from them, she had to live close enough to frequently see Spencer T. and Suzanne. 

After Spencer T and Suzanne were in college, Bernice and Kinney helped her move to a nice San Antonio Housing Authority apartment on Josephine Street where she lived until after she had a stroke.  When dismissed from the hospital she was taken to Chandler House, a Methodist Nursing Facility where she lived for about a year before she died peacefully, surrounded by family in the Nix Hospital at about 8 PM on Sunday June 28, 1981. Arriving from Virginia, Marguerite and Blackie landed at the San Antonio air port about that same time.

Her memorial service and burial were held at Sunset Memorial Park, where she is buried near Pat, Frances and Spencer in the Masonic Section.  The scriptures at her service were Isaiah 40:31:  “But they that wait upon the Lord, shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.”  Because of her love of the Texas hills, Proverbs 121: 1 was read:  “I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help.”

She was a wise counselor, a valiant tiger of a mother, ever dignified and watchful of her children and  family, nudging each along according to its capabilities, her hopes and expectations; the best of the best.


Written lovingly by Marguerite Williams Blackwelder, August 2013






Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Angeline Frances Putman Williams


Angeline Frances Putman Williams (1856-1940), married to Henry Clinton Williams. Her grandfather was Mitchell Putman, whose children who were kidnapped by Comanches.



Bio by Marguerite Williams Blackwelder

Angeline Frances Putnam was born August 31, 1856 at Gonzales in DeWitt County, the daughter of Adeline Dulcena Gipson and William Putnam.  Adeline’s parents were James Gipson and Sarah Sharpe who came to Texas from Virginia via Indiana and Iowa in the 1830’s. William was born to Elizabeth Dollar and Mitchell Putnam in Bedford County, Tennessee.  Mitchell was born in South Carolina, fought in the War of 1812, and then in The Battle of San Jacinto in 1836.  Much has been written about his search for four of his little children and 14 year old Sarah Lockhart who were kidnapped from the banks of the Guadalupe River by Comanche Indians,  and the saga of the eventual and varied return of the three Putnams that lived through the years along with Matilda Lockhart who was badly scarred.  William, with his step mother, step siblings and so many others were among those who were in The Great Escape of those traveling east, fleeing Santa Anna’s troops while Mitchell was with Sam Houston’s forces gathering at San Jacinto.

When sixteen years of age, Angeline (Angie) moved with her family to Kendall County where she lived until she married family friend, Henry Clinton Williams of the Oak Island area of Bexar County on November 22, 1882.  It was there they lived near his father, Henry Boyling Williams for some years before moving a few miles east to Thelma on the Pleasanton Road where they bought land and raised their family. Their children were Clara Rebecca, Mary Frances, Adeline Elizabeth, who died when her second child was thirteen months old, Nellie who died in infancy, Waymon Putnam, Scott Mitchell and Henrietta May.

Angie was the fifth of eleven children, all of whom lived long lives, well into the 20th century.  She was a tall woman who was known for her love of her flower garden, and encouraging all who came to her house to have something to eat, always assuming that they must be hungry. Coffee was always ready and strong in a large blue and white speckled enamel coffee pot on the back eye of the wood stove.   She was a true home-body, and wore aprons over her near ankle-length cotton dresses.  Being prone to have pre-cancers, she wore long sleeves, and like most women of her time, she always wore a bonnet when outside.  I am not sure about her sister, Temperance (Tempe), but do remember that Angie and her sister Alice indulged in the use of snuff.  For the younger generation, snuff is a powdered tobacco.  It was applied by a little brush made by  breaking off and feathering a twig used to dip into the snuff container and place it between their lower lip and teeth; beautiful. 

For whatever reason, she evidently did not write or endorse checks.  When she shopped, she went with Jennie or maybe some one else to whom Henry wrote a check for the shopping. I have copies of ones written to Jennie for that purpose.

Her sister Alice did not marry.  She was what was known as a practical nurse who stayed with patients in their homes for all sorts of reasons such as post operations and child birth.  When she did not have a patient, she stayed with various members of her family, always arriving with two trunks in which everything was in perfect order which was of much interest to me when she was with us.

In Angie's later years, her birthdays were celebrated at big family and community gatherings where beef and goat were barbequed on the ten foot long, rock-walled pit under a big oak tree on their farm with home grown vegetables, and home made pies and cakes; reminds me of South Fork Ranch in the television program, Dallas.  Being on the 31st of August, believe me, it was hot.

She died on January 4, 1940 at the age of 83 in the home of her son, Waymon at Oak Island, and is buried near her husband at Oak Island Cemetery.  She was mourned by her children, many grandchildren and the community of friends.


As remembered and submitted by her grand daughter, Marguerite Elizabeth Williams Blackwelder, daughter of Waymon and Jennie Marie Collins Williams.
October 27, 2009.

Henry Clinton Williams

Henry Clinton Williams (1856-1929); cowboy and charter member of the Texas Trail Drivers Association.

The first of his Williams family came from Wales into the southern shores of Virginia in the late 1600’s or early 1700’s, soon moving into Chowan and then Nash County, North Carolina, where they lived and prospered for decades before moving to Scott County, Mississippi for a few years before moving to Refugio County, Texas by 1855. 

Henry Clinton Williams was born in Texas on May 24, 1856 to Henry Boyling Williams and Elizabeth Winstead. Henry Boyling built and operated the first stock pens in Rockport.

Sometime after 1870, Henry Boyling and son moved to Bexar County and bought land on the south side of the Medina River near the current highways 16 and 1604 intersection.  He died in August of 1900 and is buried in Rambie Grove Cemetery near Somerset.

Henry Clinton worked with his father, gathering and herding cattle all over south Texas and participating in cattle drives north before he married Angeline Frances Putnam of Kendalia. They bought land near the Pleasanton and Neil Roads intersection, and reared their family of four girls and two sons. The children were Clara Rebecca, Mary Frances, Adeline Elizabeth, Nellie who died in infancy, Waymon Putnam, Scott Mitchell, and Henrietta May. 

Henry Clinton and Angeline Frances are buried in Oak Island Cemetery.

Having been a trail driver and a member of the Texas Trail Drivers  Association, a pocket watch and chain he found on the trail that were entrusted to the care of his grandson, Aubrey Seiler, along with his portrait were installed in a ceremony, with a delegation of generations of grandchildren and spouses in attendance, at The Texas Trail Driver’s Museum in San Antonio in May of 2008.

(bio by Marguerite Williams Blackwelder)

Standing, l to r: Henry Clinton and his father Henry Boyling Williams (1821-1900).
Seated, l to r: H.B.'s children Henderson, Mourning, and Joel.
Ca. 1880s. (From the book "Deep Roots and Strong Branches" by Clara O'Brien.)



TOOK TIME TO VISIT HIS SWEETHEART
By Henry Clinton Williams, San Antonio, Texas
(from the book The Trail Drivers of Texas, edited by J. Marvin Hunter.)

I was born on a stock ranch in Refugio County in 1856, and spent most of my life working with cattle. In those early days people lived on cornbread, beef, milk, butter and coffee, about the only store-bought articles being coffee and sugar, and not much of that. I helped to gather and drive cattle to Rockport for W.S. Hall in 1869, and for several years thereafter. In 1872 I drove a herd to that place for George W. Saunders, who is now the president of our Trail Drivers' Association. George was a good boss and a hard worker. He was also a lover of fine clothes and pretty girls, and one day while we were near William Reeves' ranch, four miles above Refugio, George had us stop the herd and make camp so he could call on his sweetheart, Miss Rachel Reeves. We had plenty of time to reach a good stock pen six miles further on, but he was so anxious to see his girl that he held us there. George later married Miss Reeves, in 1884. I have known Mr. Saunders all of my life and know he will "stand hitched" any place on earth. He never forgets a friend.

I worked stock in all the coast counties and knew all of the old-timers in that region. In 1880 I went to Kansas and drove a drag herd with pack horses from Caldwell County, Texas.

In 1871 I built seven miles of barbed wire fence for W.E. and Tom McCampbell of Rockport, it being the first barbed-wire fence in San Patricio County.

I am now living in Bexar County on a farm and ranch and can ride all day and do any kind of farm or ranch work. My father was a well-known stockman in the early days and was known as "Uncle Boiling" Williams.




HENRY CLINTON WILLIAMS, OUR COWBOY     
Bio by Marguerite Williams Blackwelder

Written for my grand daughters when they were little girls.

My grand father, your great, great grandfather Henry Clinton Williams was a cowboy, riding and herding cattle  throughout the south Texas country side during the 1870’s where his father Henry Boyling Williams built the first stock pens at the gulf coast town of Rockport from where the cattle were taken by ship to eastern United States markets.   Also in 1880, he drove a drag herd of cattle with pack horses from Caldwell County, Texas along the Chisholm Trail to Kansas where there were railroads.  It was there that the cattle were loaded onto box cars and taken to the eastern markets.  These were the beginnings of his working with live stock all his life.

Because the cattle of several owners could be in one herd being driven to market, it was necessary to put a brand on them so that the owner could be credited and paid for those of his that were sold.  Using his initials, Henry Boyling Williams originated and registered the brand Hb that he and his son, Henry Clinton used.  It was kept current and used by  my father, Waymon Putnam Williams  and his brother, Scott.  Our cousin, Henry Clinton Williams III, who lives in Snook near College Station, Texas currently has the brand.

Henry Clinton worked for years with his friend George W. Saunders.  Because it would have seemed he was bragging, he did not say in the autobiographical sketch he wrote in the book TRAIL DRIVERS OF TEXAS that he and Mr. Saunders were the organizers of the Texas Trail Drivers Association which was a highly respected organization of cattlemen and ranchers that had their meetings, conventions and balls at the Gunter Hotel on Houston Street in San Antonio.  Anytime those men went to San Antonio on business or pleasure, they always went to the Gunter Hotel for meals or to spend nights where they knew they would meet friends.  They always looked so handsome in their western town clothes: good looking, well made cowboy boots, a fine leather belt with a sterling silver belt buckle and a fine Stetson hat.

Grandpa died in 1930 when I was four years old so I do not remember seeing him there but I do remember seeing others when I worked in the city during the 1940’s.  It was a fascinating atmosphere when they were visiting and doing business in that fine hotel lobby and coffee shop.  Grandpa took my mother to the Trail Drivers Balls as she liked to dance and grandma did not.  Since they were tall and slim, I am sure they made a fine looking pair.  Those balls were always held in the Grand Ballroom at the Gunter.  I was lucky to go to dances in that same room but not to those of the Trail Drivers.

My clearest memories of grandpa was seeing him sitting straight and tall on his horse in the shade of a big live oak tree that was between the house and barn on his ranch when we drove out to see him and grandma.  At the age of 68 years, he wrote in the aforementioned book printed in 1924 that he could ride all day and do any kind of farm or ranch work.  I also remember him sitting, reared back on a chair in the big kitchen/dining room.  All the dining chairs had cow hide seats that could be replaced as needed.  Some had hairs on them, and the hairs were worn off on others from people sitting on them.  He and my father, Waymon Putnam Williams, worked cattle together until the year after my father married Jennie Marie Collins on October 7, 1917 and they moved to San Antonio. 

When he died on October 11, 1930, the headline on his funeral notice in the San Antonio newspaper read RANCHER FINDS “END OF TRAIL.”  He and grandma were buried at the Oak Island Methodist Church Cemetery near her Texas Ranger brother, James Mitchell Putnam.