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Created page with ''''Romeo Marcus Williams (June 4, 1919 - August 16, 1960)''' was a prominent civil rights attorney who played a pivotal role in the desegregation of Marshall, Texas. He was also a junior partner with prominent Dallas, Texas civil rights attorney, William J. Durham, who served as the lead counsel on two landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases, Sweatt v. Painter (with famed civil rights attorney and future U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Thu...'
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Revision as of 21:01, 31 July 2021

Romeo Marcus Williams (June 4, 1919 - August 16, 1960) was a prominent civil rights attorney who played a pivotal role in the desegregation of Marshall, Texas. He was also a junior partner with prominent Dallas, Texas civil rights attorney, William J. Durham, who served as the lead counsel on two landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases, Sweatt v. Painter (with famed civil rights attorney and future U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall), and Smith v. Allright.[1]

Williams was also an U.S. Army Air Force officer and trained fighter pilot with the prodigious 332nd Fighter Group, best known as the Tuskegee Airmen, "Red Tails," or “Schwartze Vogelmenschen” ("Black Birdmen") among enemy German pilots.[2]

Early Life

Williams was born on June 4, 1919 in Marshall, Texas's predominately African American Sunny South neighborhood.[3][4] He was the son of Milton Wjlliams, Sr., owner of the Peoples Funeral Home, a funeral establishment founded in 1923 and have been located across the street from the [[historically black college and university, Bishop College. Williams was also the son of Josie P. Campbell Williams, East Texas's first African American female funeral director.[5][6] Wjlliams, Sr and his wife also founded six other funeral homes as well as the Peoples Funeral Service Insurance Company.[7]

Williams had two siblings: Milton Wjlliams Jr. and Joseph Wjlliams.[8] After Milton's Sr.'s death in 1966 and Josie's death in 1975, Milton Williams, Jr. ran the family's funeral business until his death in 1992.[9] William's Jr.'s son, Milton Williams III, an U.S. Air Force Captain and missile crew commander, ran the family business until his death in 2014.[10] Milton Williams III's wife, Julia Frilot Williams, manages the business with her daughter Kelli.[11]

In 1933, Williams completed Marshall Public Schools' grade school, and enrolled at H. B. Pemberton High School. An exceptional student, Williams played saxophone in the school's band, and played on the football and baseball teams.[12][13]

Williams attend Prairie View A&M College (now Prairie View A&M University). After one year there, Willianms transferred to Bishop College, where he graduated on May 23, 1941 with a Bachelor of Science Degree.[14] During his tenure at Bishop, Williams was initiated at the XXXX Chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. on February 13, 1939.[15]

Though he briefly worked at his family's funeral business after graduating from Bishop College, Williams set his sights on becoming a fighter pilot after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.[16]

On June 10, 1951, Williams married Edith Arbuckle Williams in Dallas, Texas, with a honeymoon in New Orleans, Louisiana.[17]


Military Career, Tuskegee Airmen

In 1942, Wi1liams became the first African American in East Texas youth to pass the U.S. Army Air Corps entrance exam. On December 13, 1942, Williams graduated as a member of the Single Engine Section Cadet Class SE-42-K, receiving his silver wings and commission as a 2nd Lieutenant.[18][19] Despite not engaging in combat during World War II, Williams transported various aircraft across the United States.

On September 15, 1945, The U.S. Army Air Corps honorably discharged Williams with the rank of 1st Lieutenant.[20]

Post-Military, Career as Civil Rights Attorney

After leaving the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1945, Williams planned to attend law school. However, at the time, no schools in Texas admitted African Americans.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

Nonetheless, Williams moved to St. Louis, Missouri to attend the now-defunct Lincoln University School of Law, graduating with a juris doctor on June 6, 1949.[21] Soon after, Williams became a junior partner at the Dallas, Texas law firm of William J. Durham, a prominent civil rights attorney who became the lead counsel on two landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases, Sweatt v. Painter (with famed civil rights attorney and future U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall), and Smith v. Allright.[22] During his seven-year legal career in Dallas, Williams co-founded on May 4, 1952 the Barristers' Club, an African American bar association. Co-founders included C.W. Asberry, L.A. Bedford, C.B. Bunkley, Jr., W.J. Durham, Kenneth F. Holbert, D.H. Mason, Robert Rlce, L. Clayton River, U. Simpson Tate, and J.L. Turner, Jr.[23] The associated met monthly to discuss tactics to combat discrimination inside and outside the legal profession.[24] As a result of these Williams and his fellow attorneys' activism and legal prowess, the NAACP, in the early 1950s, located its southwest regional office to Dallas.[25]

In 1956, Williams moved back to Marshall, Texas to establish his own civil rights law practice next door to his family's funeral home.[26][27][28]

Between March and August of 1960, Williams helped organized large student courthouse marches and sit-ins of F. W. Woolworth and bus station lunch counters. At the courthouse, firemen used water hoses on many students, arresting students on charges of unlawful assembly.[29]

Death

On August 16, 1960, Williams defended students in Marshall, Texas who were arrested while participating in civil rights sit-ins and demonstrations.[30] While driving two student clients, Mae Etta Johnson and Bernice Halley, back to their boarding house, a railroad switching engine struck Williams' automobile, immediately killing Williams and Johnson, and permanently injuring Halley.[31][32]

Authorities in Marshall dropped the charges against the students, and soon after desegregated all public facilities[33][34]

Williams' family funeral home held Williams' funeral at Marshall, Texas's New Bethel Baptist Church.[35] Bishop College President Milton K. Curry performed the eulogy.[36]

  1. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  2. ^ "Tuskegee Airmen Pilot Roster". CAF Rise Above. CAF Rise Above. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
  3. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  4. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  5. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  6. ^ Peoples Funeral Home: Marshall's Oldest Family Owned Funeral Home." https://www.peoplesfh.com/about-us
  7. ^ Peoples Funeral Home: Marshall's Oldest Family Owned Funeral Home." https://www.peoplesfh.com/about-us
  8. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  9. ^ Peoples Funeral Home: Marshall's Oldest Family Owned Funeral Home." https://www.peoplesfh.com/about-us
  10. ^ Peoples Funeral Home: Marshall's Oldest Family Owned Funeral Home." https://www.peoplesfh.com/about-us
  11. ^ Peoples Funeral Home: Marshall's Oldest Family Owned Funeral Home." https://www.peoplesfh.com/about-us
  12. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  13. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  14. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  15. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  16. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  17. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  18. ^ CAF Rise Above. "Tuskegee Airmen Pilot Roster." https://cafriseabove.org/the-tuskegee-airmen/tuskegee-airmen-pilot-roster/ . This data derives from CAF Rise Above's research project compiling data from Tuskegee Airmen historians including the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
  19. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  20. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  21. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  22. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  23. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  24. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  25. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  26. ^ https://www.countylinemagazine.com/destination-guides/marshall/accidental-death-takes-civil-rights-attorney-in-1960/article_8fc02ccc-3401-5a67-8d0a-ce184bcbfe93.html
  27. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  28. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  29. ^ East Texas Historical Journal. "Romeo M. Williams: Tuskegee Airman and Civil Rights Lawyer." Milton H. Williams III . Volume 43 Issue 1 Article 6. 3-2005.
  30. ^ https://www.countylinemagazine.com/destination-guides/marshall/accidental-death-takes-civil-rights-attorney-in-1960/article_8fc02ccc-3401-5a67-8d0a-ce184bcbfe93.html
  31. ^ https://www.countylinemagazine.com/destination-guides/marshall/accidental-death-takes-civil-rights-attorney-in-1960/article_8fc02ccc-3401-5a67-8d0a-ce184bcbfe93.html
  32. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  33. ^ https://www.countylinemagazine.com/destination-guides/marshall/accidental-death-takes-civil-rights-attorney-in-1960/article_8fc02ccc-3401-5a67-8d0a-ce184bcbfe93.html
  34. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus
  35. ^ https://www.countylinemagazine.com/destination-guides/marshall/accidental-death-takes-civil-rights-attorney-in-1960/article_8fc02ccc-3401-5a67-8d0a-ce184bcbfe93.html
  36. ^ Texas State Historical Association. "Williams, Romeo Marcus (1919–1960)." Peggy Hardman. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/williams-romeo-marcus