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CHARLES RICHARD WILLIAMS. (326) |
CHARLES RICHARD WILLIAMS
BY LUCY ELLIOT KEELER
In all the generation of able men now
passing, few
possessed the vitality and social
charm, coupled with the
keen intellect, scholarly tastes and
professional acumen
of the late Charles R. Williams. It had
seemed incred-
ible that such bright, sparkling
springs of life could ever
run dry. His death, on May 6, 1927, at
his home in
Princeton, New Jersey, brought a sense
of acute loss to
a very wide and devoted circle of friends
and admirers.
The burial took place in Indianapolis.
Dr. Williams' connection with the Ohio
State Arch-
aeological and Historical Society, was
his work of editing
the sixty years of "The Diary and
Letters of Rutherford
Birchard Hayes," published in five
substantial volumes
by the Society, the final volume
appearing only last year.
They were, moreover, supplemental to
Dr. Williams'
two-volume "Life of President
Hayes," which appeared
in 1914, and which Andrew D. White characterized
as
one of the three or four best
biographies in the English
Language. These seven volumes were
issued by the So-
ciety as the "Hayes Series."
At several of the public occasions at
the Spiegel
Grove State Park, in Fremont, Ohio,
under the auspices
of the Ohio State Archaeological and
Historical Society
-- notably the Dedication of the Hayes
Memorial Li-
brary and Museum, May 30, 1916, and the
Centenary
Celebration of the Birth of President
Hayes, October 4,
(327)
328 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society
Publications
1922 -- Dr. Williams was a principal
speaker, his
scholarly and eloquent addresses being
printed in the
publications of the Society. His
subject on these occa-
sions was President Hayes, whose life,
mind, character
and public service, through diaries,
letters and collec-
tions, had been Dr. Williams' most
intensive study, and
who had won his sincere admiration.
Dr. Williams was born in Prattsburgh,
N. Y., April
16, 1853. He was a student in the
University of Roches-
ter from 1871 until 1873, and then
attended Princeton
University, where he received an A. B.
degree in 1875
and his master's degree in 1878. He
studied also in the
Universities of Gottingen and Leipzig.
In 1878-79 he was principal of the
Auburn, (N. Y.),
High School and the next year became
Latin tutor in
Princeton University. In 1881 he was
appointed editor
of Potter's American Monthly, of
Philadelphia, and
after a year in the editor's chair he
left to become pro-
fessor of Greek in Lake Forest, (Ill.),
University and
remained with the university until
1883.
After leaving Lake Forest University
Mr. Williams
became literary editor of the New York World
and in
the latter part of 1883 he became
assistant general man-
ager of the Associated Press with
headquarters at New
York. On October 2, 1884, he married
Almira, daugh-
ter of William Henry Smith, head of the
Associated
Press. Mrs. Williams died May 24, 1895.
He con-
tinued with the Associated Press until
May, 1892, when
he 'became editor-in-chief of the
Indianapolis News,
being co-owner with his father-in-law.
He occupied the
post of editor-in-chief of the News until
April, 1911.
Charles Richard Williams 329
On June 23, 1902, Mr. Williams married
Bertha
Rose Knefler, of Indianapolis, who
survives him.
In 1911, after nineteen arduous years
of editorship,
during which time the Indianapolis News
became one
of the great newspapers of the country,
Mr. Williams
resigned to begin work on the Hayes
papers, a task be-
queathed to him by William Henry Smith,
Ohio's Sec-
retary of State under the distinguished
War-Governor,
Brough, and Hayes' closest personal and
political friend;
and for several years he passed much of
his time at
Spiegel Grove, where the Hayes material
had been col-
lected and scrupulously cared for.
In 1914, Mr. Williams removed to
Princeton, New
Jersey, and later bought and remodeled
the house in
Cleveland Lane, which had been occupied
by Woodrow
Wilson while he was Governor of New
Jersey, and from
which he went to the White House. There
Mr. Wil-
liams led a life of busy leisure among
his books in his
beautiful library, and in the pleasant
society of a uni-
versity town; and there he wrote the
"History of the
Cliosophic Society" of the
University, the oldest literary
society in America, in commemoration of
its 150th anni-
versary. He also gathered up his
scattered poems into
a delightful volume. Honorary
distinctions received by
Mr. Williams for his works, were the
degree of doctor
of philosophy from Princeton
University, an L. H. D.
degree from Wabash College, in 1893,
and the LL. D.
degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University
and Kenyon
College.
A resolution adopted by the
Indianapolis Literary
Society, shortly after his death, says,
in part:
"We knew Mr. Williams as a man of
letters, a de-
330
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
vout classicist, a scholar and a man of
the finest and
most sensitive literary taste. The
curiosity of the Greek,
so highly praised by Matthew Arnold,
and so unlike
what often today passes for such, was
possessed by Mr.
Williams in high degree. It was in his
case the curiosity
of the wise questioner of life, of one
ever eager to extend
the bounds of his knowledge. There
could be no better
proof than that afforded by his career
of the value of
classical training and learning in the
practical business
of living. He demonstrated in his own
person that there
was no war between culture and
efficiency, and that
ignorance was not the passport to
success. * * *
"His nature was finely social. The
words of Terence
he had made his own: 'I am a man, and
nothing that
concerns a man do I deem a matter of
indifference to
me.' Loving life and its contacts, it
was never difficult
for Mr. Williams to establish and
maintain cordial and
friendly relations with others,
especially those who were
associated with him in daily work. He
was the pleas-
antest of men, always thoughtful for
others, and con-
siderate of them.
"Both as writer, and editor of
classical authors, he
did excellent work. Through the paper
of which he was
for nineteen years the editor, he
exerted a strong in-
fluence for good, and was the friend
and enthusiastic
and effective supporter of all worthy
causes. The high
ideals, by which he himself was led, he
ever strove to
make effective in the life of the
community. A great
public servant has gone to his
reward."
An editorial in the Indianapolis News
says: "Proba-
bly Indianapolis never numbered in its
citizenship a
more scholarly man than Mr. Williams.
He was a
Charles Richard Williams 331 scholar without being a recluse, for his interest in what was going on about him was keen. His nature was so- cial to a marked degree. There was in him none of the student's aloofness .... His literary taste was of the fin- est and his judgment on literary matters was sound. He had a rather unpitying scorn for what was metricious; yet he was no narrow specialist. He knew not only liter- ature, but history, philosophy, economics, public finance, and had a mastery of the problems which confront an editor who aspires to be of service to the public. His knowledge was as accurate as it was comprehensive. His influence was widely felt and was ever on the side of what was good and true and nobly elevating." Dr. Williams made instant appeal to both men and women, young and old. He was the best kind of com- pany: ready, witty and brilliant in conversation; a sym- pathetic and responsive listener; full of social resource -- to write an impromptu verse for some special occa- sion, or to concoct some unusual entertainment; an au- thority on facts when such were wanted; kindly, gen- erous, sincere; adored by his family and kindred, and welcomed as a friend by even his most casual acquaint- ances. |
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CHARLES RICHARD WILLIAMS. (326) |