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Source:
MEMORIAL RECORD
of
BUTLER COUNTY, OHIO
Containing Biographical Sketches of Representative Citizens of
the County
Together with Biographies and Portraits of all the
Presidents of the United States
Publ. Chicago
Record Publishing Company
1894
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ISRAEL WILLIAMS.
In the brief and imperfect outline we are able to give
in this sketch of the personal history of one of the
oldest living representatives of the Butler County Bar,
we can do little more than merely glance at some of the
principal events with which he has been connected during
his long and useful career as an attorney, patriot and
citizen. Rising through his own unaided efforts
from a humble position in youth to a place of honor and
distinction among men, his life and character present a
useful lesson to the youth of this generation, and add
another striking illustration of the power and force of
determined purpose and perseverance.
This influential citizen of Hamilton is one of Ohio’s
native-born sons. His birth occurred in Montgomery
County, Aug. 24, 1827, to the union of William and
Mary (Marker) Williams, the former a native of
Bedford County, Pa., and the latter a native of
Frederick County, Md. In the family there were
three sons and six daughters. The sons, Israel,
George (of Hamilton, Ohio) and Raymond (of
Whitley County, Ind.), still survive, but only one
daughter is living, Mary Ann, wife of
Samuel Briggs, of St. Paris, Champaign
County, Ohio.
In the year 1816 William Williams came to Ohio
and settled in Montgomery County. When about
thirty years of age he removed from there to Champaign
County, which he made his home until his death in 1872,
at the age of sixty-nine years. Throughout his
entire life he engaged in farming, and in addition
thereto occasional held public positions.
His wife survived him about three years, dying in 1875,
when sixty-eight years old. They were a worthy
couple and devoted members of the English Lutheran
Church.
Israel Williams, Sr., our subject’s grandfather,
was born in York County, Pa., of Welsh parent age, and
by trade was a blacksmith. In 1816, ac companied
by his family, he boarded a flatboat at Johnstown, Pa.,
and came down the Ohio to Cincinnati, from which place
he proceeded to Montgomery County and afterwards to
Champaign County. Establishing his permanent home
there, he continued to reside in that county until his
death, at the age of eighty-four. He and his wife
reared a family of ten children. The maternal
grand father of our subject, George Marker,
was born in Maryland and was a wagon-maker by trade,
though he also engaged in farming for many years.
About 1825 he came to Ohio and became a resident of
Montgomery County, where he died, aged seventy seven
years.
The most of his time until eighteen years of age our
subject spent in Champaign County, after which he
practically made Montgomery County his home until he
came to Hamilton in 1856. After gaining the
rudiments of his education in the district schools he
entered Granville College (now known as Denison
University), and later was a student in Farmers’ (now
Belmont) College, from which institution he was
graduated in 1853. He then began the study of law
in the office of Gunckel & Strong, of
Dayton, and conducted his reading under their tutelage
until March, 1855, when he was admitted to the Bar at
Cincinnati, upon the completion of a course of study and
graduation from the Cincinnati Law School. From
Ohio he went to Washington, D. C., where he was employed
seven months, and later went to Des Moines, Iowa,
remaining in that city six months. In 1856 he came
to Hamilton, and since then has occupied the same
office, giving his attention to the management of his
large practice.
Mr. Williams was a Democrat previous to the late
war, but with the firing on Ft. Sumter his party
adhesion was changed and he gave a hearty support to the
government of Abraham Lincoln. To
strengthen the Union cause he purchased, in conjunction
with Frederick Egry, the Telegraph, the
Democratic organ of this county, Oct. 24, 1861, and
shortly afterwards merged the Hamilton Intelligencer
with it, which paper they also purchased. During
their management the paper gave no uncertain sound.
It upheld the Union and the prosecution of the war.
On the 12th of March, 1863, Mr. Williams disposed
of his interest in the newspaper enterprise to Capt.
John C. Lewis. Through the entire period he
was a member and Secretary of the Military Committee of
Butler County. His associate members on the
committee were the Hon. N. C. McFarland, Judge
Alexander F. Hume, Maj. John M. Millikin and
Henry Beardsley. The duties of the
committee were varied and very useful. In all
matters of recruiting soldiers and selecting officers
they were in intimate relation with Governors Tod
and Brough, and the committee was no less useful
in providing measures for support of the families of the
patriotic soldiers in the military service from this
county. His support has ever been given to
measures tending to the development of the place and the
enhancement of its prosperity. He was largely
instrumental in securing the present cheap gas supply
for Hamilton and in effecting the city ownership of the
water and gas works, which was accomplished about 1879.
On the 9th of January, 1860, Mr. Williams was
united in marriage with Miss Maggie, daughter of
John and Mary (Norman) Wakefield, natives
respectively of Kentucky and Pennsylvania. Mrs.
Williams was born May 27, 1838, and is well known in
the social circles of this place, and is an active
member of the Presbyterian Church. Of the live
children born to Mr. and Mrs. Williams, we note
the following: Zella died in infancy; Mary
married Frank G. Warden, of Newark, Ohio;
Stella is the wife of J. Volney Gilbert, of
Muncie, Ind.; Nina is the wife of Thomas L.
Tincher, now a resident of Asheville, N. C.; and
John W., the only son, is in the employ of the E.
B. Rodgers Furniture Company, of Hamilton.
Nature has bestowed upon Mr. Williams a vigorous
mind. He has been quick to see an emergency, and
equally quick to devise means of overcoming it.
His energy is one of the most noticeable traits of his
character. His habits of prompt decision have made
him a man of earnest and decided convictions, and both
by nature and training he is admirably adapted for the
successful discharge of every duty that his profession
may bring to him.
Source: Memorial Record of
Butler County, Ohio - Publ. 1894 - Page 384 |
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NELSON WILLIAMS,
one of the foremost and most able members of the Bar of
Butler County, resides in Hamilton. His native
endowments and broad culture have admirably qualified
him for the successful practice of his chosen
profession. From the time he began his legal
readings until the present he has steadily progressed in
the study of law, and has attained the distinction of
being one of the safest and soundest counselors of the
Hamilton Bar. In addition to his general practice,
he accepted in 1882 the position of attorney for the
Provident Life and Trust Company, of Philadelphia, and
since 1887 he has had full charge of their legal
business in Ohio.
George and Margaret (McKinley) Williams, the
parents of our subject, were born in Ohio, and were here
married. The father, who for many years was the
proprietor of a sawmill and mercantile establishment,
removed from the Buckeye State to Nebraska, after which
he spent two years in Whitley County, Ind. About
1882 he came to Hamilton, where he is now agent for the
Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. During the late war
he entered the army for the one hundred days’ service,
and at the expiration of that time was honorably
discharged. With his wife, he holds membership in
the Universalist Church.
The paternal grandfather of our subject, William
Williams, spent his entire life as a tiller of
the soil, and at an advanced age died near St. Paris,
Ohio. Our subject’s maternal grandfather,
William McKinley, also a farmer by
occupation, was a resident of Champaign County, Ohio,
where he died in the prime of manhood.
The family of which our subject is a member consisted
of six children, of whom five are living, namely:
Nelson, who was born in St. Paris, Champaign County,
Ohio, Mar. 23, 1853; Alice, wife of Eli Waer;
Sherman; Lillie, who married Rev. H. M. Egolf,
of Bloomfield, Ind.; and William S. The
deceased sister was named Emma. Nelson
was reared in Champaign County until thirteen years old,
when he accompanied his parents to Conover, Miami
County. There he attended a graded school, after
which he engaged in teaching for a period of three
years. It had been his ambition to become an
attorney, and in the pursuit of this desire he came to
Hamilton in March, of 1874, and began the study of law
in the office of Israel
Williams. Admitted to the Bar in
April, 1876, he remained with his former preceptor until
1881, when, in July, he began practicing alone, and has
since carried on a large practice in the various courts
of this city and county.
The marriage of Mr. Williams, Oct. 21,
1880, united him with a lady of culture and refinement,
who is an active member of the Trinity Episcopal Church,
and with her husband stands high in the best circles of
the city. She was Miss Susannah Mallory,
daughter of Dr. Henry and Ann M. (Rider) Mallory,
of this city. Socially Mr. Williams is
identified with hut one secret order - that of
Freemasonry. He became a member of this order in
1886, and within a year held membership in all York Rite
bodies. He soon became proficient in the esoteric
work of Symbolic Freemasonry, and was elected and served
two years as Worshipful Master of Washington Lodge No.
17, F. & A. M., of Hamilton. While occupying this
office, he was appointed Assistant to the District
Lecturer, and for the last two years he has been the
District Lecturer of the Second Lecture District of the
state. In Capitular, Cryptic and Chivalric
Freemasonry he has been no less active. He is the
present High Priest of Hamilton Chapter No. 21, R. A.
M., and the present Thrice Illustrious Master of
Hamilton Council No. 19, R. & S. M. He is also
Generalissimo of Hamilton Commandery No. 41, K. T., and
at the coming election will undoubtedly be elected
Eminent Commander. He is the Grand Orator of the
Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio, and is
the Conductor in the State Council of High Priests.
He is also a member of Dayton Valley and Ohio
Consistories of the A. and A. Scottish Rite, and of
Syrian Temple of the Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of
the Mystic Shrine, of Cincinnati, in which latter order
he has recently won much distinction as the author of
“The Daughters of the Nile.”
As a Republican, Mr. Williams is actively
connected with the public affairs of the city and
county. For several years he has been Executive
Committeeman of the Ohio Republican League, and is one
of the Managing Directors and Secretary of the
Republican Publishing Company. He is a man of
versatile ability, and while excelling as a lawyer has
also gained a wide reputation as a poet. His
writings have been extensively copied by the press, and
are of the rhythmic and mellifluous character that is
universally admired. In this connection we are
pleased to present to our readers the following poem
written by Mr. Williams:
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The Poetry of Masonry.
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The Poetry of Masonry,
like some sweet scented flower,
Spreads fragrance over all that grows within its sacred
bower.
The lily may most perfect be, and so the blushing rose;
The honeysuckle beautify the spot wherein it grows.
The violet may raise its head toward a friendly sky.
But what would all these flowers be to either you or me,
If they did not sweet fragrance shed to all humanity?
Our landmarks may
remain unchanged through all the years to come,
Our lights and jewels be displayed as in the years agone;
The emblems we delineate on Master's carpets here.
May still remain when each of us has left this earthly
sphere.
The symbols of our noble craft, so beautiful to see,
May please the eye of brethren who shall follow you and
me;
But none will ever comprehend the lessons they impart,
Until they learn the poetry of Masonry by heart.
The poetry of Masonry is that which beautifies
And brings to clearer view the truths our emblems
symbolize.
It is not always found in rhyme nor yet in metered
prose;
It sometimes happens that a word its beauty may
disclose.
Our lambskin aprons pure and white, to every Mason dear.
Our letter G, which all may see above the Master's
chair,
All tell in sweetest poetry of God's protecting care.
The poetry of Masonry
is that true harmony
Which should prevail amongst the craft where'er
dispersed they be.
It looks beyond the words and forms to something grander
still;
It fills the heart with charity and brotherly good will.
It is that halo which surrounds a noble work well done,
Which takes our choicest sentiments and blends them into
one;
That one the grandest, most sublime, the truest of the
true;
Do unto others as you would that they should do to you.
Source: Memorial Record
of Butler County, Ohio - Publ. 1894 - Page 156 |
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