WELLS, OPAL B., 1912-1996
Biography:
Grocer. Born– July 30, 1912, in McKenzie, Ala. Parents– Herbert and Frances Hartley Bennett. Married– Loran H. Wells, July 2, 1928. Children– One. Managed grocery store for 30 years. Died August 5, 1996.
Source:
Opal B. Wells, Red Level, Ala.
Publication(s):
The Light Within. Atwood, Tenn.; Elder S. T. Talley, 1974.
Some of My Remembrances. Atwood, Tenn.; Elder S. T. Talley, 1984.
WERTENBAKER, LAEL TUCKER, 1909-1997
Biography:
Journalist. Born– March 28, 1909, in Bradford, Pa.; grew up in Mobile. Parents– Royal and Juliet (Luttrell) Tucker. Married– Charles Christian Wertenbaker, September 1942 (died 1955). Children– Two. Married– Branwell Fletcher, September 1970. Education– University of Louisville. Road secretary, Theatre Guild, Inc., of New York City, 1929-1938; foreign and war correspondent, Time, Inc., 1940-1955; freelance writer, after 1955; wrote scripts for CBS-TV (Orson Wells series) and for British television (Rediffusion series). Member of the board of Monadnock Music, National Repertory Theatre Foundation, Ossabaw Island Foundation. Awarded honorary doctorates by Keene State College (1975) and Franklin Pierce College. (1982). Died March 24, 1997.
Source:
Contemporary authors online; Who’s Who of American Women; International Authors and Writers’ Who’s Who; Foremost Women in Communications; obituary, New York Times, March 29,1997.
Publication(s):
The Afternoon Women. Boston; Little, 1966.
Death of a Man. New York; Random House, 1957.
The Eye of the Lion. Boston; Little, 1964.
The Eye; Window to the World. Washington, D.C.; U.S. News Books, 1981.
Festival. New York; Random House, 1954.
Lament for Four Virgins. New York; Random House, 1952.
Mister Junior. Paterson, N.J.; Pageant Books, 1960.
Perilous Voyage. Boston; Little, 1975,
Rhyming Word Games. New York; Simon and Schuster, 1964.
To Mend the Heart. New York; Viking Press, 1980.
Unbidden Guests. Boston; Little, 1970.
Joint Publication(s):
The Hotchkiss School … Lakeville, Conn.; Hotchkiss School, 1966.
The Magic of Light; the Craft and Career of Jean Rosenthal…. Boston; Little, 1972.
Mercy Percy. New York: Lippincott, 1961.
Rhyming Word Games. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1964.
Tip and Dip. Philadelphia; Lippincott, 1960.
The World of Picasso (1881-1973). Time Life Books, 1967.
You and the Armed Services; an Up-to-Date Guide… New York; Simon and Schuster, 1961.
WEST, HERBERT BUELL, 1916-1990.
Biography:
Advertising executive; foundation executive. Born– April 16, 1916, in Birmingham, Ala. Parents– Edward Hamilton and Clarine (Buell) West. Married– Maria Selden McDonald, November 29, 1946. Children– Five. Education– Birmingham Southern College, A.B., 1936. Major, Adjutant General Corps, U. S. Army, 1941-46. Advertising writer, 1936-1950; advertising executive, Batten, Barton, Durstine and Osborne, New York City, 1950-1966. Director, New York Community Trust, 1967-. Member– Board of directors, New York University Medical Center; Traveler’s Aid International Social Service; United Community Funds. Died April 19,1990.
Source:
Who’s Who in America.
Publication(s):
Stay with Me Lord; a Man’s Prayer. New York; Seabury, 1974.
WHEELER, CINDY, 1955-
Biography:
Children’s author. Born– May 17,1955 in Montgomery, Ala. Parents– Kenneth Bradford and Joanne Dingus Wheeler. Married Robert Patrick Lee, July 26, 1980. Children–three. Education– Auburn University, B.F.A., 1977. Children’s book buyer, Zibart’s Bookstore, Nashville, 1977-78; executive secretary, Alfred A. Knopf, NY, 1977-80; freelance illustrator, designer and writer, 1980-84; Assistant to Art Director, Lothrop, Lee and Shepherd, 1984-85; co-owner, The Bookstore on Wall Street, Asheville, NC. Alabama Library Association Award for Best Children’s Book, 1985.
Source:
Alabama Public Library Service; Contemporary Authors online.
Publication(s):
The Bookstore Cat. Random House, 1994.
A Day on the Farm. Happy House, 1987.
Early Easter Morning. Scholastic, 1997.
Emperor’s Birthday Suit. Random House, 1996.
A Good Day, A Good Night. New York; Lippincott, 1980.
Marmalade’s Christmas Present. New York; Knopf, 1984.
Marmalade’s Nap. New York; Knopf, 1983.
Marmalade’s Picnic. New York; Knopf, 1983.
Marmalade’s Snowy Day. New York; Knopf, 1982.
Marmalade’s Yellow Leaf. New York; Knopf, 1982.
Merry Christmas, Little Mouse. Happy House, 1986.
More Simple Signs. Viking, 1998.
A New House for Little Mouse. New York; Random House, 1987.
Rose. New York; Knopf, 1985.
Sally Wants to Help. New York; Random House, 1988.
The Scaredy Cats and the Haunted House. New York; Random House, 1982.
Simple Signs. Viking, 1995.
Spring Is Here! Happy House, 1989.
What’s In Your Basket? Scholastic, 1997.
Illustrator:
Dad Told Me Not To. Milwaukee; Raintree Pubs., 1983.
One Step, Two… New York; Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1981.
Red House, Blue House. Peel Productions, 1997.
Someone Just Like Me. Milwaukee; Raintree Pubs., 1983.
That Olive! New York; Lothrop, Lee, 1986.
What’s In Your Basket? Little Simon, 1998.
WHEELER, HARRY EDGAR, 1874-1958
Biography:
Methodist clergyman; naturalist; museum curator. Born– March 18, 1874, in Birmingham, Ala. Parents– J. Henry and Adelaide Lucia Bliss Wheeler. Married– Annie Lee Warren. Children– Five. Education– Lehigh University; Southeastern University; Vanderbilt University. Ordained Methodist minister, 1896; served churches in Alabama and Arkansas. Worked in Field Museum, Chicago, 1924-; Alabama Museum of Natural History, University of Alabama; Birmingham Public Library, 1953-1958; Curator, Indian Springs School Museum. Died March 11, 1958.
Source:
Alabama Dept. of Archives and History.
Publication(s):
The Birds of Arkansas; a Preliminary Report. Little Rock, Ark.; State Bureau of Mines, Manufactures and Architecture, 1924.
Timothy Abbott Conrad, with Particular Reference to His Work in Alabama One Hundred Years Ago. Ithaca, N.Y.; Paleontological Institution, 1935.
WHEELER, JESSE HARRISON, JR., 1918-1994
Biography:
College professor. Born– November 24, 1918, in Scottsboro, Ala. Parents– Jesse Harrison and Lucy (Enochs) Wheeler. Married– Margery Ellen Gary on October 3, 1943. Children– Three. Education– Auburn University, B.S. 1939, M.S., 1941; University of Chicago, Ph.D., 1950. Taught at Boys High School, Atlanta, 1940-1941; University of Missouri, 1949-. Served in U.S. Army, 1941-1946. Ford Foundation Faculty Fellow, 1951-1952. Review Editor, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 1961-1969. Member– Association of American Geographers, National Council on Geographic Education and American Geographic Society. Died July 8, 1994.
Source:
Who’s Who in America; American Men and Women of Science.
Publication(s):
Workbook and Study Guide for Regional Geography of the World. New York; Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1964.
Joint Publication(s):
Essentials of World Geography. Fort Worth, TX: Saunders, 1993.
Essentials of World Geography. Fort Worth, TX; Saunders, 2000.
Regional Geography of the World; an Introductory Survey. New York; Holt, 1955.
WHEELER, JOSEPH, 1836-1906
Biography:
Soldier; businessman; congressman. Born– September 10, 1836, in Augusta, Ga. Parents– Joseph and Julia Knox (Hull) Wheeler. Married– Daniella Jones
Sherrod, February 8, 1866. Children– Six. Education– U.S. Military Academy; graduated 1859; further instruction at the army cavalry school at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. Commissioned second lieutenant in the Regiment of Mounted Riflemen and served at Fort Craig in the Mexican territory, but resigned to enlist in the Confederate Army, April 3, 1861; named Colonel, 19th Army Infantry; nicknamed “Fighting Joe”; brigadier general, October 1862; major general, January 1863; lieutenant general, February, 1865. Commanded in over 800 skirmishes and 200 battles. At the end of the war he became a partner in the New Orleans hardware and carriage firm Bouton, Smith, and Denman; moved to Lawrence County, Alabama, in 1870, where he read law and opened a law partnership, Jones and Wheeler, with his brother-in-law. Served in the U.S. Congress, 1882-1898. Volunteered during Spanish-American War; appointed major general; senior in command at San Juan; senior officer to negotiate surrender of Spanish in Cuba. Commanded brigade in Philippines, 1899-1900. Retired from the military on September 10, 1900. Died January 25, 1906. One of the few Confederate veterans accorded burial in Arlington Cemetery.
Source:
National Cyclopedia of American Biography, Vol. 9; Who Was Who in America, Vol. 1.
Dyer, John P. From Shiloh to San Jaun: The Life of Fightin’ Joe Wheeler. Baton Rouge; LSU Press, 1941.
Publication(s):
Confederate Military History of Alabama. Atlanta; Confederate Pub. Co., 1899.
“The Philippines” in the New America and the Far East… Boston; Marshall Jones Co., 1907.
Report on the Island of Guam. Washington, D.C.; Government Printing Office, 1900.
A Revised System of Cavalry Tactics, for the Use of Calvary and Mounted Infantry, C.S.A. Mobile, Ala.; S.H. Goetzel Co., 1863.
Selections from the Speeches of Hon. Joseph Wheeler, of Alabama, in the House of Representatives, Fifty-first and Fifty-second Congresses, March 4, 1889, to March 3, 1893. Washington, D.C.; Government Printing Office, 1893.
Selections from the Speeches of Hon. Joseph Wheeler, of Alabama, in the House of Representatives, Second Session, Forty-seventh Congress, January 15 to March 3, 1883. Washington, D.C.; Government Printing Office, 1883.
Speech of Hon. Joseph Wheeler of Alabama in the House of Representatives, Tuesday, February 16, 1886. Washington, D.C.; Government Printing Office, 1886.
Joint Publication(s):
Cuba’s Struggle against Spain with the Causes of American Intervention and a Full Account of the Spanish-American War, Including Final Peace Negotiations. New York; American Historical Press, 1899.
Memorial Record of Alabama… Madison, Wisc.; Brant & Fuller, 1893.
Papers;
A collection of Joseph Wheeler’s papers is held by Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress. Some of his family letters are held by the A.S.Williams III Americana Collection at the University of Alabama.
WHITAKER, ARTHUR PRESTON, 1895-1979
Biography:
Historian; College professor. Born– June 6, 1895, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Education– University of Tennessee, A.B., 1915; Harvard University, A.M., 1917, Ph.D., 1924; Rhodes Scholar to Oxford, 1917; Austin Fellow, Harvard, 1920-1921; studied at the Sorbonne, 1919. Taught at University of Tennessee; Simmons; New York University; Amherst College; Florida State College for Women; Vanderbilt; Western Reserve; Cornell; University of Pennsylvania, 1936-1943, 1945-1965. U.S. Dept. of State, 1943-1945. Visiting professor, Johns Hopkins, National University of Bogota , University of Heidelberg, University of Texas, University of Wisconsin, University of Illinois-Urbana. Consultant, Foreign Policy Research Institute, Philadelphia, 1969. Member– Hispanic Society of America, American Philosophical Society. Died January 1979.
Source:
Director of American Scholars; Who’s Who of North American Authors.
Publication(s):
Las Am‚ricas y un Mundo en Crisis. Lancaster, Pa.; Lancaster Press, 1946.
Argentina. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.; Prentice-Hall, 1964.
Argentine Upheaval; Peron’s Fall and the New Regime. New York; Praeger, 1956.
Development of American Regionalism; the Organization of American States. New York; Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1951.
The Huancavelica Mercury Mine; a Contribution to the History of the Bourbon Renaissance in the Spanish Empire. Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 1941.
Latin American History Since 1825. Washington, D.C.; Service Center for Teachers of History, 1961.
The Mississippi Questions, 1795-1803; a Study in Trade, Politics and Diplomacy. New York; Appleton-Century, 1934.
Nationalism in Latin America; Past and Present. Gainesville, Fla.; University of Florida Press, 1962.
The New Argentine Collection. Philadelphia; Friends of the University of Pennsylvania Library, 1964.
Spain and the Defense of the West. New York; Harper, 1961.
The Spanish-American Frontier 1783-1795; the Westward Movement and the Spanish Retreat in the Mississippi Valley. Boston; Houghton Mifflin, 1927.
The United States and Argentina. Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 1948.
The United States and South America; the Northern Republics. Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 1948.
The United States and the Independence of Latin America, 1800-1830. Baltimore; Johns Hopkins Press, 1941.
The United States and the Southern Cone; Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay. Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 1976.
The Western Hemisphere Idea; Its Rise and Decline. Ithaca; Cornell University Press, 1954.
Contributor:
The Ibero-American Enlightenment. Urbana; University of Illinois Press, 1971.
Editor:
Documents Relating to the Commercial Policy of Spain in the Floridas, with Incidental Reference to Louisiana. DeLand; The Florida State Historical Society, 1931.
Inter-American Affairs; an Annual Survey. New York; Columbia University Press, 1941.
Latin America and the Enlightenment. New York; Appleton-Century, 1942.
Mexico Today. American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1940.
WHITAKER, WALTER CLAIBORNE, 1867-1938
Biography:
Teacher, minister. Born– January 28, 1867, in Lenoir, N.C. Parents– Lucius Fletcher and Rowena (Oates) Whitaker. Married– Isabel Preston Royal on March 3, 1891. Children– Four. Dorothy French, February 4, 1918. Education– Alabama Polytechnic Institute, A.B., 1884; A.M. 1891; University of South, D.D., 1909. Taught at Barton Academy, Mobile, 1884-1888. Minister in Auburn, Montgomery and Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Jackson, Mich.; Ashville, N.C; Knoxville, Tenn.; Norfolk, Va.; Bowling Green, Ky.
Source:
Who Was Who in America, Vol. 1
Publication(s):
The Church in the Southern Highlands. Hartford, Conn.; Church Missions Pub. Co., 1929.
Dives and Lazarus; Six Studies, 1898. History of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Alabama, 1763-1891. Birmingham, Ala.; Roberts & Son, 1898.
The Prodigal Son; Church Parables of Mercy. S.l.; Church Year Pub. Co. 1890.
Revelations of the Cross. S.l.; s.n., 1923.
Richard Hooker Wilmer, Second Bishop of Alabama; a Biography. Philadelphia; G.W. Jacobs, 1907.
A Round Robin; the Southern Highland and Highlanders. Hartford; Conn.; Church Missions Pub., 1916.
WHITE, DAVID HART, 1922-1977
Historian; university professor; businessman. Born–July 13, 1922, Birmingham. Parents–James Herbert and Margaret Morgan White. Married–Elizabeth O’Neal, August 12, 1949. Children–four. Vanderbilt University, B.A.; University of Alabama, Ph. D., 1973. WWII, served in US Navy. Worked for fifteen years in the steel industry; taught history at UAB until his death. Published articles in professional historical journals. Traveled extensively in Europe and Spain in the course of his research. Died 1977.
Source;
“About the Author,” note in Vincente Folch.
Publications;
Vincente Folch, Governor in Spanish Florida, 1787-1811. Washington DC: University Press of America, 1981.
WHITE, HALLIE CANTRELL, 1893-1977.
Biography:
Businesswoman; genealogist. Born– March 21, 1893. Parents– Toulous Polk and Octavia Emaline (Patterson) Cantrell. Married– Ernest White on November 15, 1920. Children– Four. Operator, White Printing Company, Huntsville, Ala., 1929-1960. Member– United Daughters of the Confederacy, Daughters of the American Revolution, Altrusa Club, Twickenham Study Club, Alabama Society. Died ctober 29, 1977.
Source:
White-Cantrell and Allied Families.
Publication(s):
White-Cantrell and Allied Families. Huntsville, Ala.; White Printing Co., 1967.
WHITE, HENRY EUGENE, JR., 1931-
Biography:
Minister, teacher. Born– July 4, 1931, in Meadville, Mich. Parents– Henry E. and Allie (Oglesby) White. Married– Betty Meador on August 23, 1953. Children– Four. Education– Mississippi College, B.A., 1952; Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, D.B., 1956, Th.M., 1957; Mississippi State University, Ph.D., 1970; Cumberland Law School, J.D., 1972. Baptist minister, Kentucky, Alabama, and Mississippi, 1957-1965. Teacher at Mississippi State University, 1965; Samford University, 1966-. Member– Southern Sociological Society, Alabama Southeastern and National Councils on Family Relations, Jefferson County Mental Health Association.
Source:
Who’s Who in Alabama, Vol. 3.
Publication(s):
Divorce; Attempting to Cope. Birmingham, Ala.; H. E. White, 1978.
Looking for Stars. Boston; Christopher Pub. House, 1963.
Making Marriage Successful. New York; Irvington Pub., 1983.
Marriage, the Family, and the Bible. Boston; Christopher Pub. House, 1961.
WHITE, MARJORIE LONGNECKER, 1944-
Biography:
Born– December 16, 1944, in Pittsburgh, Pa. Parents– Herbert E. and Jane Segar Longnecker. Married– James H. White, III, on August 13, 1968. Children– Three. Education– Newcomb College, B.A., 1966; Yale University, M.Phil., 1970. Worked at University of Alabama, Birmingham, 1968-1972; Birmingham Historical Society, 1975-. Awarded Woodrow Wilson Fellowship. Member– Phi Beta Kappa, Mortar Board. Preservationist of the Year, Alabama Historical Commission, 1981; distinguished service award, Alabama Historical Society, 1982.
Source:
Marjorie Longnecker White, Birmingham, Ala.
Publication(s):
The Birmingham District; an Industrial History and Guide. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1981.
Birmingham Heritage Hike. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1980.
Downtown Birmingham; Architectural and Historical Guide. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1977.
Downtown Discovery Tour. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1978.
Five Points Heritage Tour. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1983.
Joint Publication(s):
Cinderella Stories; Transformations of Historic Birmingham Buildings. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1990.
Designs on Birmingham; a Landscape History of a Southern City and its Suburbs. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1989.
Village Creek; an Architectural and Historical Resources Survey of Ensley, East Birmingham, and East Lake, three Village Creek Neighborhoods, City of Birmingham. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1985.
Editor:
Downtown, an Outdoor Classroom. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1978.
Old Birmingham, New Architecture. Birmingham, Ala.; Birmingham Historical Society, 1984.
WHITE, ROY IRVEN, 1901-1992
Biography:
Writer, clergyman. Born– November 23, 1901, in Winamac, Ind. Parents– William E. and Nancy Elizabeth (Yost) White. Married– Ruth E. Wine, June 7, 1924. Children– Two. Education– Manchester College, B.A., 1927; Bethany Biblical Seminary, B.D.; Northwestern University, M.A. Worked at Chicago Transit Authority, 1927-1960. Minister, Douglas Park Church of the Brethren, Chicago, 1936-1945; pastor, Churches of the Brethren, Bristol, Tenn., 1960-1962; Spindale, N.C, 1962-1965; Frostburg, Md., 1965-1968. Retired to Citronelle, Ala., 1968. Moderator of his denomination, 1964-1965, 1972-1973; president of Citronelle Kiwanians, three years; president ministerial associations, Maryland and Alabama, five years. Published nine novelettes; thirty short stories; column “Top of the Morning”, ten years. Died January 18, 1992.
Source:
Not identified
Publication(s):
Stormy Crossing. Elgin, Ill.; Brethren Press, 1963.
Venturing South. Elgin, Ill.; Brethren Press 1958.
WHITING, KENNETH R., 1913-1993
Biography:
Military analyst; professor. Born– February 23, 1913, in Somerville, Mass. Parents– Oscar R. and Mary Ann (Morrison) Whiting. Married– Alice Mary Sexton in September 1940. Education– Boston University, B.A., 1940; UCLA, M.A., 1941; Harvard, Ph.D., 1951. Taught at Tufts University, 1948-1950; Research Associate, Air University, 1951-; George Washington University at Air University, 1961-. Died March 6, 1993.
Source:
Contemporary Authors online.
Publication(s):
Background Information on Mainland China. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Aerospace Studies Institute, Air University, 1970.
Background Information on the People’s Republic of China. Air University; Documentary Research Division, Academic Publications Division 3825th Academic Services Group, 1976.
Background Information on the Soviet Union. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Research Studies Institute, Air University, 1959.
The Chinese Communist Armed Forces. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Aerospace Studies Institute, Air University, 1976.
The Development of the Soviet Armed Forces, 1917-1972. Maxwell Air Force Base; Air University, 1972.
The Development of the Soviet Armed Forces, 1917-1977. Maxwell AirForce Base; Air University, 1978.
Evolution of the Sino-Soviet Split; a Summary Account. Maxwell Air Force Base; Directorate of Documentary Research, Air University Institute for Professional Development, 1975.
Ideologies in Conflict. Maxwell Air Force Base; Air Command and Staff College, Air University, 1962.
Iron-ore Resources in the USSR. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Research Studies Institute, Air University, 1952.
Reading in Soviet Military Theory. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Research Studies Institute, Air University, 1952?
Soviet Air Power, 1917-1976. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Academic Publications Division, 3825th Academic Services Group, Air University, 1976.
Soviet Air Power, 1917-1978. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Air University Library, Air University, 1979.
Soviet Problems of Nationality and Industrial Management. Maxwell Air Force Base; Documentary Research Division, Research Studies Institute, 1956.
Soviet Reactions to Change in American Military Strategy. Maxwell Air Force Base; Air University, 1965.
The Soviet Union Today; a Concise Handbook. New York; Praeger, 1962.
Contributor:
Impact of Air Power. New York; Van Nostrand, 1958.
Soviet Air and Rocket Forces. New York; Preager, 1959.
WHITMAN, WILLIAM TATE, 1909-2003.
Biography:
Economist; college professor. Born– October 26, 1909, in Boaz, Ala. Parents– Edward Fenno and Jane Moore (Street) Whitman. Married– Luisita Dye on August 12, 1936. Children– Two. Education– Duke University, B.A., 1929, M.A., 1933, Ph.D., 1943. Taught at Citadel (1936-47), Duke(1939-40), Emory(1950-1978). Visiting professor, Davidson College. Member– American Economic Association, Southern Economic Association, Industrial Relations Research Association. Awarded professor emeritus status at Emory on his retirement in 1978. Died October 25, 2003.
Source:
Contemporary Authors online.
Who’s Who online.
Joint Publication(s):
Corporate Earning Power and Market Valuation, 1935-55. Durham, N.C.; Duke University Press 1959.
Investment Timing; the Formula Plan Approach. New York; McGraw-Hill, 1953.
Marketing Management; a Quantitative Approach. New York; Simmons-Boardman, 1964.
Joint Editor:
Essays in Southern Economic Development. Chapel Hill, N.C.; University of North Carolina, 1964.
WHITT, LEOVIS COATS, 1917-1996
Biography:
Teacher; poet. Born– May 11, 1917, in Limestone County. Parents–John Thomas and Malah Bell Blair Coats. Married– Carlton Dennis Whitt. Children– Five. Education– Athens College, A.B., 1940, M.A.T., 1971.; additional study at Florence State College, the University of Alabama, the University of Mississippi, and the University of London. Taught in Limestone County and Athens City Schools. Member– American Association of University Women, Sigma Tau Delta, Alabama Archaeological Society, Huntsville Literary Association, Decatur Art Guild. Died May 6, 1996.
Source:
Alabama Public Library Service; findagrave website.
Publication(s):
An Altar of Words. 1968.
WICKS, CHARLES BEAUMONT, 1907-1986.
Biography:
Professor of French. Born– October 21, 1907, in Port Washington, N.Y. Parents– Charles Hamilton and Eva Lucille (Crum) Wicks. Married– Florence Henderickson, July 15, 1929. Children– Three. Education– Wesleyan University, Conn., A.B., 1929; Johns Hopkins, Ph.D., 1935; University of Paris; University of Madrid; University of Mexico. Taught at Wesleyan, 1932-1934; Johns Hopkins, 1934-1935; University of Alabama, 1935-1975. Fulbright scholar to France. Member– American Association of Teachers of French, Modern Language Association, Alabama Education Association, Phi Beta Kappa. Died January 1986.
Source:
Who’s Who in America.
Publication(s):
Charles-Guillaume Etienne, Dramatist and Publicist (1777-1845). Baltimore; Johns Hopkins Press, 1940.
The Parisian Stage; Alphabetical Index of Plays and Authors. 5 vols. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1950-1979.
WICKSTROM, JEAN CAROLE, 1942-
Biography:
Teacher, journalist. Born– December 9, 1942, Ishpeming, Mich. Parents– Walter W. and Katherine N. Wickstrom. Married– Curtis Liles. Education– University of Alabama, B.S., 1964. Taught home economics at Oxford secondary schools, four years. Food editor, Southern Living and Progressive Farmer, 1972-. Member– American Home Economics Association, Alabama Home Economic Association, Birmingham Home Economists in Business.
Source:
Personalities of the South; Dinner and Supper Cookbook; Alabama Public Library Service; Birmingham Public Library.
Publication(s):
Chicken Cookbook. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 1976.
Party Snacks Cookbook. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 1974.
Salads Cookbook. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 1975.
Compiler:
Casseroles Cookbook. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 1974.
The Dinner and Supper Cookbook. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 1977.
Our Best Recipes, Vol. 3. Birmingham, Ala.; Oxmoor House, 1978.
WIER, ALLEN, 1946-
Biography:
Teacher. Born– September 9, 1946, in San Antonio, Tex. Parents– Ralph A. and George Ann (Marrs) Wier. Married– Dara Dixon, April 2, 1969. Education– Baylor University, B.A., 1968. Louisiana State University, M.A., 1970; Bowling Green State University, M.F.A., 1974. Yard clerk, Kansas City Southern Railroad, 1966-1967; laborer, All-Texas Ranch Supply, Waco, Tex., 1967-1968. Teacher at Longwood College, Va., 1970-1972; Carnegie Mellon University, 1974-1975; Hollins College, 1975-1980; University of Alabama, 1980. Published articles in anthologies and periodicals.
Source:
Contemporary Authors, Vol. 77.
Publication(s):
Blanco. Baton Rouge, La.; Louisiana State University Press, 1978.
Departing as Air. New York; Simon & Schuster, 1983.
A Place for Outlaws. New York; Harper & Row, 1989.
Things About To Disappear; Stories. Baton Rouge, La.; Louisiana State University Press, 1978.
Voicelust… Lincoln; University of Nebraska, 1985.
WIER, DARA, 1949-
Biography:
Teacher. Born– December 30, 1949, in New Orleans, La. Parents– Arthur Joseph and Grace (Barrios) Dixon. Married– Allen Wier, April 2, 1969. Education– Louisiana State University; Longwood College; Bowling Green State University, M.F.A., 1974. Taught at University of Pittsburgh; Hollins College; University of Alabama. Awarded National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, 1980. Member– Authors Guild of the Authors League of America, Associated Writing Program. President, Associated Writing Program.
Source:
Contemporary Authors, Vol. 77; Alabama Public Library Service.
Publication(s):
All You Have in Common. Pittsburgh; Carnegie-Mellon University Press, 1984.
Blood, Hook, & Eye. Austin, Tex.; University of Texas Press, 1977.
The Book of Knowledge. Pittsburgh; Carneigie Mellon University Press, 1988.
The 8-Step Grapevine. Pittsburgh; Carnegie-Mellon University Press, 1980.
WIGGINS, SARAH VAN VOORHIS WOOLFOLK, 1934-
Biography:
Historian; professor of history. Born– Montgomery, Ala., 1934. Parents–Robert N. and Dixie G. Woolfolk. Married– Peyton N. Wiggins, November 25, 1967 (died 1974). Children– One. Education– Huntingdon College, B.A., 1956; Louisiana State University, M.A., 1958, Ph.D., 1965. Taught at South Seminary Junior College 1959-1961; University of Alabama, 1961-. Editor Alabama Review, 1976-. Member– Alabama State Capitol Preservation Commission, American Historical Association, Organization of American Historians. Awarded emerita status on her retirement from the University.
Source:
Director of American Scholars; Alabama Dept. of Archives and History.
Publication(s):
Love and Duty: Amelia and Josiah Gorgas and their Family. University of Alabama Press, 2005.
The Scalawag in American Politics, 1865-1881. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1977.
Editor;
The Journals of Josiah Gorgas, 1857-1878.
The Journals of Sarah Haynsworth Gayle, 1827-1835. University of Alabama, 2014.
Compiler:
From Civil War to Civil Rights, Alabama, 1860-1960. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1986.
WILDMAN, JOHN HAZARD, 1911-1982
Biography:
Literary scholar; university professor; novelist;poet. Born– January 22, 1911, in Mobile, Ala. Parents– Alexander James and Rachel Greene (Whitaker) Wildman. Education– Brown University, B. Ph., 1933, M.A., 1934, Ph.D., 1937. Taught at Brown University, 1937-1940; Louisiana State University, 1940-1942, 1945-1980. U.S. Army Air Force, 1942-1945. Member– Phi Beta Kappa, American Association of University Professors, Modern Language Association, American Association for the Advancement of Science. Died March 23, 1982.
Source:
Who’s Who in the South and Southwest.
Publication(s):
Anthony Trollope’s England. Providence, R.I.; Brown University, 1940.
Fever, A Novel. New York; Exposition Press, 1953.
Forgotten Land, Another Look; Poems. Philadelphia; Dorrance, 1966.
Peter Marvell. Boston; Bruce Humantities, 1952.
Rebirth and the Road to Vigor; the Renewal of Old Louisville… Louisville; Urban Renewal and Community Development Agency, 1966.
Sing No Sad Songs; a Novel. New York; Exposition Press, 1955.
Sun on the Night; Poems. New York; Sheed and Ward, 1962.
Papers:
The papers of John Hazard Wildman are held by the Special Collections Department at
WILES, DAVID KIMBALL, 1942-
Biography:
Teacher. Born– February 23, 1942, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Parents– Kimball and Hilda (Long) Wiles. Married– Marilyn McCall, December 31, 1964. Children– Two. Education– Florida State University, B.S., 1964; University of Florida, M.Ed., 1967, Ed.D., 1969. Taught at University of Florida; Ontario Institute for the Study of Education; Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Member– American Education Research Association, Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, Phi Delta Kappa, and editorial board, Educational Forum.
Source:
Leaders in Education, 5th ed., Who’s Who in the Midwest.
Publication(s):
Changing Perspectives in Educational Research. Worthington, Ohio; C. A. Jones Pub. Co., 1972.
Energy, Winter, and Schools; Crisis and Decision Theory. Lexington, Mass.; Lexington Books, 1979.
Political Interpretations of Educational Administration. New York; Arno Press, 1977.
Practical Politics for School Administrators. Boston; Allyn and Bacon, 1981.
WILKERSON, WALTER THOMAS (THOM), 1938-
Biography:
Born– October 10, 1938, in Boaz, Ala. Married– Betty Sue Varney. Children– Three. Education– University of Alabama; University of South Florida, B.A. Worked as butcher, mail clerk, newspaper reporter and editor, bank teller and officer. Press relations manager, Barnett Banks of Florida. Editorial staff, Gadsden Times, Birmingham Post-Herald, Ocala (Florida) Star Banner. Editor, Barnett Action, corporate magazine for Barnett Banks.
Source:
Alabama Public Library Service; To the Port Beyond; SCRIPSIT.
Publication(s):
Boaz. Tampa, Fla.; American Studies Press, 1982.
Song of the Ocarina; a Book of Verse. New York; Vantage Press, 1965.
To the Port Beyond. Birmingham, Ala.; Banner Press, 1965.
WILKES, WILLIAM PUGH, 1880-1967
Biography:
Baptist clergyman. Born– March 14, 1880, in Josie Beat, Pike County, Ala. Parents– William Henry and Susannah Missouri Lawson Pugh. Married– Mamie Tupper Powell, September 3, 1909. Children–five. Education– Howard College; Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Th.D. Ordained, July 15, 1906, First Baptist Church, Troy. Pastor, Brownwood, Tex.; served churches in Mobile, Cullman, Decatur, Opelika, Centreville and Blountville. Member– State Baptist Executive Board, Foreign Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, trustee, Howard and Judson Colleges. Died January 23, 1967.
Source:
Biographical Dictionary of Alabama Baptists; Alabama Dept. of Archives and History.
Publication(s):
An Alabama Boy, 1880-1902. Troy, Ala.; s.n., 1954?
Chasing an Education. Troy, Ala.; s.n., 1955.
Compiler:
Biographical Dictionary of Alabama Baptists, 1920-1947. Opelika, Ala.; Post Pub. Co., s.d.
WILKINS, BENJAMIN HARRISON, SR., 1856-1941
Biography:
Businessman. Born– April 4, 1856, in St. Mary’s Parish, La. Parents– Richard Augustus and Margaret Adams (Minge) Wilkins. Lived in Virginia, 1860-1870; moved to Selma, Ala. Education– private tutors and Richmond schools. Married– Mattie Kent. Children– One. Married– Janie B. Weeden in 1898. Children– One. Married– Mary D. McDavid Foster of Florence. Employed as bank messenger and as jobber. Commissioned a captain in Alabama National Guard; served twenty years. Operated overalls manufacturing plant, Nashville, 1892; established the Tennessee Overalls Company, Tullahoma, 1905.
Source:
Encyclopedia of American Biography, New Series, Vol. 15.
Publication(s):
War Boy; a True Story of the Civil War and Reconstruction Days. Tullahoma, Tenn.; Wilson Brothers, 1938.
WILLBERN, YORK YOUNG, 1915-2007
Biography:
Political scientist, university professor. Born– December 29, 1915, in Runge, Tex. Parents– David York and Berta (Young) Willbern. Education– Southwestern Texas State College, A.B., 1934; University of Texas, A.M., 1938; Ph.D., 1943. Married– Johnne Bryant, December 25, 1937. Children– Two. Military service: Army Air Force, World War II. Taught high school in Texas, 1939-1942; North Texas State College, 1942-1943; University of Alabama, 1946-1957 (head of the Department of Political Science); Indiana University, 1957-1981; Professor of Government and Director of the Bureau of Government Research. Editor-in-chief, Public Adminstration Review, 1956-1958. Visiting professor at Duke, Columbia, Syracuse, University of Texas, Lewis and Clark, Portland State, and Victoria University in New Zealand. Chaired the administrative committee of the Southern Regional Training Program for Public Administration, 1949-1957; director, urban observation project, National League of Cities, 1968-1974; chaired, Indiana Housing Board, 1975-1977. Member of many professional organizations. Died April 13, 2007.
Source:
Who’s Who in America, 1982-1983; University of Indiana website
Publication(s):
Cities and Riverfront Lands. University, Ala.; Bureau of Public Administration, 1947.
Unigov; Local Government Reorganization in Indianapolis. S.l.; s.l., 197-.
The Withering Away of the City. University, Ala.; University of Alabama Press, 1964.
Joint Publication(s):
Growth and Change at Indiana University; Report of the University Study Committee. Bloomington, Ind.; Indiana University Study Committee, 1966.
Compiler:
Technical Assistance to Alabama Governments; a Directory, 1949. University, Ala.; s.n., 1949.
Contributor:
Public Administration and Policy Formation; Studies in Oil, Gas, Banking, River Development and Corporate Investigations. Austin, Tex.; University of Texas, 1956.
Metropolitan Issues–Social, Governmental, Fiscal; Background Papers for the Third Annual Faculty Seminar on Metropolitan Research, August 20-30, 1961. Syracuse, N.Y.; Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, 1962.
Papers:
The Papers of York Willbern are held by the Archives Department of the Library at the University of Indiana, Bloomington.
WILLCUTT, C.C. (CLEM CLEMENCY), 1886-1976
Biography;
Clergyman; Evangelist. Born– Corona, February 10, 1886. Parents– Elijah and Amanda Willcutt. Married–Cora Simmons, 1904. Children–twelve. Worked as a miner in Corona, 1904-1909; went to work for the Southern Railroad in 1909; operated a farm for a few years. Began his preaching career in 1921; served as pastor of several churches in central Alabama, including the Tarrant Baptist Church. Began preaching on the radio in the early 1930’s, first on WSGN and in 1938 on WBRC. Left the pastorate of Tarrant Baptist Church to engage in fulltime evangelistic work. Died 1976.
Source;
Echoes from the Life of C.C.Willcutt.
Publications;
Echoes from the Life of C.C.Willcutt, The Radio Railroading Evangelist. Bessemer, Alabama; Willcutt.
WILLIAMS, ANNIE LAURIE, 1861-1932
Biography:
Teacher. Born– December 13, 1861, in Montgomery, Ala. Education– private schools. First elementary worker, Baptist Sunday School Board. Author of first book on Southern Baptist training course featuring an elementary department. Adapted room, equipment, and lessons to needs of children. Superintendent, primary department, Southside Baptist Church, Birmingham; Field worker, Sunday School Board, 1909-1932.
Source:
Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists.
Publication(s):
Plans and Programs. Nashville; Sunday School Board, Southern Baptist Convention, 1918.
Message of the Season. Nashville; Sunday School Board, Southern Baptist Contention, s.d.
Lesson Building for Sunday School Teachers. Nashville; Sunday School Board, Southern Baptist Convention, s.d.
WILLIAMS, BENJAMIN BURFORD, 1923-
Biography:
Teacher. Born– April 28, 1923, in New York City. Married– Marilyn. Children– Four. Education– University of Alabama, B.A., 1948, M.A., 1950; Vanderbilt, Ph.D., 1971. Grew up in Mobile, Ala. Taught at University of Alabama, Mobile, 1950; Vanderbilt, 1950-1952; Martin College, 1952-1953; University of Alabama, Montgomery, 1957-1971; Auburn University, Montgomery, 1971-. Member– Modern Language Association, National Council of Teachers of English.
Source:
Directory of American Scholars.
Publication(s):
A Literary History of Alabama; the Nineteenth Century. Rutherford, N.J.; Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1979.
Joint Arthur; Governors of Alabama. Montgomery, Ala.; Alabama Journal & Advertiser, 1984.
The Role of the Senate in Alabama History. Troy, Ala.; Troy State University Press, 1978.
Editor:
Sketches of Mobile. Selma, Ala.; B.A. Reynolds, 1971.
WILLIAMS, BESSIE LEE BRADFORD, 1887-1966
Biography:
Journalist. Born– March 19, 1887 in Huntingdon, Tenn. Married– Edd O. Bradford, March 27, 1907. Children– One. Education– in East Tennessee. Wrote column “Coffee Break” for Albertville Herald and Sand Mountain Reporter. Died July 5, 1966.
Source:
Mrs. Spurgeon Fricks, Albertville Public Library.
Publication(s):
Coffee Break. S.l.; s.n., s.d.
WILLIAMS, BILLY LEE, 1938-
Biography:
Baseball player. Born– June 15, 1938, in Whistler, Mobile County, Ala. Parents– Frank and Jessie Mary Williams. Married– Shirley Williams, February 25, 1960. Children– Four. Education– Mobile County Training School. Played baseball, minor leagues, 1956-1960; Chicago Cubs, 1961-1974; Oakland Athletics, 1974-. National League’s Rookie of the Year, 1961; National League’s Player of the Year, 1970; Major League’s Player of the Year, 1972. Played in six All-Star games. Established National League record, most consecutive games played, 1117.
Source:
Who’s Who among Black Americans; Billy, the Classic Hitter.
Joint Publication(s):
Billy, the Classic Hitter. New YorK; Rand-McNally, 1974.
Iron Man. Chicago; Children’s Press, 1970.
WILLIAMS, CHARLES BRAY, 1869-1952
Biography:
Clergyman, university professor and administrator. Born– June 15, 1869, in Shiloh, N.C. Parents– Simeon Walston and Mary (Bray) Williams. Married– Alice Julia Owen, January 2, 1899. Children– Three. Married– Lucile Adams Bruner, December 26, 1925. Married– Edith Stallings, August 26, 1934. Children– One. Education– Wake Forest College, A.B., 1891; Crozier Seminary, B.D., 1901; University of Chicago, A.M., 1908, Ph.D., 1909. Licensed to preach 1886; ordained 1889. Baptist pastor in Chester, Pa.; Texarkana, and Rockdale, Tex.; Shiloh, N.C. Taught at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1905-1919; served as dean of the seminary, 1913-1919; Mercer University, 1921-1925; Union University, Jackson, Tennessee, 1925-1939. . Managing Editor, Southwestern Journal of Theology, 1917-1919. President, Howard College, 1919-1921. Died May 4, 1952.
Source:
Who Was Who in America, Vol. 3.
Publication(s):
Baylor Bible School Lectures; Delivered at the Mid-Winter School, January, 1907. Waco Tex.; Baylor University Press, 1907.
Citizens of Two Worlds, and Other Sermons. New York; Fleming H. Revell, 1919.
A Commentary on the Pauline Epistles. Chicago; Moody Press, 1953.
The Evolution of New Testament Christology. Boston; R. G. Badger, 1928.
The Function of Teaching in Christianity. Nashville; Sunday School Board, Southern Baptist Convention, 1912.
A History of the Baptists in North Carolina. Raleigh, N.C.; Edwards & Broughton, 1901.
Introduction to Christian Ethics. Kansas City, Mo.; Western Baptist Pub. Co., 1925.
An Introduction to New Testament Literature. Kansas City, Mo.; Western Baptist Pub. Co., 1929.
New Testament History and Literature. Kansas City, Mo.; Western Baptist Pub. Co., 1917.
The New Testament in the Language of the People. Boston; B. Humphries, Inc., 1937.
The Participle in the Book of Acts. Chicago; University of Chicago Press, 1909.
WILLIAMS, CLANTON WARE, 1904-1975
Biography:
Teacher. Born– June 13, 1904, in Montgomery, Ala. Parents– Clanton Ware and Tallulah Hart (McGehee). Married– Claudine Payne, July 25, 1936. Children– Two. Education– Davidson, A.B., 1927; University of Alabama, A.M., 1928, LLD. and L.H.D., 1974; Vanderbilt, Ph.D., 1938; Alabama Polytechnic Institute; University of Chicago. Taught at Barnes School, Montgomery; Ashville, N.C; University of Alabama, 1929-1955; University of Houston, vice-president for academic affairs, 1955; president, 1956-1961. Consultant, 1960-1963, U S. Air Force; Dept. of Health, Education, & Welfare; NASA. Chief educational advisor, Agency for International Development in India, 1963-1967; coordinator of instruction, International Education in Pakistan, 1967-1969. Executive Director, Alabama Commission on Higher Education, 1970-1973.
Source:
Who’s Who in America.
Publication(s):
The Early History of Montgomery and Incidentally of the State of Alabama. University, Ala.; Confederate Pub. Co., 1979.
The Gist of English History. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Weatherford Printing Co., 1933.
Ideologies in Conflict. Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.; Air Command and Staff School, Air University, 1951.
The Topical History of Britain. Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Weatherford Printing Co., 1936. (Revision of The Gist of English History).
Uncle Sam; a Short History of the United States of America, with Some Interpretations. London; W. Heinemann, Ltd., 1944.
WILLIAMS, DANIEL T., 1935-
Biography:
Librarian. Born– September 20, 1935, in Miami, Fla. Education– West Virginia State College, B. S., 1956; University of Illinois, M.S., 1957. Librarian, Tuskegee Institute, 1957-. Member– American, Catholic and Alabama Library Associations.
Source:
Who’s Who in Library Science.
Publication(s):
The Freedom Rides; a Bibliography, 1961. Tuskegee, Ala.; Hollis Burke Frissell Library, Tuskegee Institute, 1962.
The University of Mississippi & James H. Meredith; a Bibliography. Tuskegee, Ala.; H. B. Frissell Library, Tuskegee Institute., 1963?
Joint Compiler:
The Black Muslims in the United States; a Selected Bibliography. Tuskegee, Ala.; H. B. Frissell Library, Tuskegee Institute, 1964.
Eight Negro Bibliographies. New York; Kraus Reprint Co., 1970.
WILLIAMS, DOUGLAS FREDERICK, 1927-
Biography:
Teacher. Born– July 23, 1927, in Laurium, Mich. Education– Northern Michigan University, B.A., 1950; University of Michigan, M.A., 1953; University of Texas, Ph.D., 1970; AYI Fellow, University of Texas, 1957-1958. Taught at high schools in Michigan, 1950-1953; Northern Michigan University, 1963-1965; National Teachers College, Uganda, 1965-1967; Auburn University, 1970-. Member– American Association of Community Colleges, National Society for the Study of Education, Phi Delta Kappa.
Source:
Leaders in Education; Personalized Faculty Development.
Joint Publication(s):
Personalized Faculty Development; Rationale, Application and Evaluation. Bear Creek, Ala.; CESCO, 1979.
WILLIAMS, GEORGE KENDRICK, 1930-
Biography:
Lawyer. Born– February 16, 1930, in Greenville, Ala. Parents– John Robbins and Myra Lou (Ware) Williams. Married– Doris Karen Toftoy, 1954. Children– Three. Education– University of Alabama, B.S., 1954, J.D., 1956. Admitted to bar, 1956; practiced before U.S. Supreme Court, 1975. Partner, Camp, Williams and Spurrier and Rice, 1975-. Member– Board of Appeals, Alabama Industrial Relations Dept.; special assistant attorney general, twice; special counselor, Alabama Real Estate Commission; Democratic Executive Committee, Huntsville.
Source:
Who’s Who in American Law.
Publication(s):
Alabama Supplement to Modern Real Estate Practices. Chicago; Real Estate Ed. Co., 1978.
Joint Publication(s):
Alabama Study Guide for Real Estate Fundamentals. Chicago; Real Estate Education Co., 1986.
WILLIAMS, HANK, JR., 1949-
Biography:
Singer. Born– May 26, 1949, in Shreveport, La. Parents– Hank and Audrey Williams. Married– Gwen Yeargain. Children– One. Married– Beck White. Toured with Audrey Williams’ Caravan of Stars; appeared in musical shows and film “My Cheating Heart”; recorded songs.
Source:
Who’s Who in America.
Joint Publication(s):
Living Proof; an Autobiography. New York; Putnam, 1979.
WILLIAMS, HERBERT LEE, 1918-2004
Biography:
Professor of journalism. Born June 1, 1918, in Birmingham, Ala. Parents– William Percy and Lucy (Cowan) Williams. Married– Mary Elizabeth Roberts, 1948. Children– Three. Education– Murray State College, B.A., 1940; University of Mississippi, M.A., 1941, Ph.D., 1955. Taught at Boston University, 1949-1951; University of Mississippi, 1951-1954; Michigan State University, 1954-1956; Memphis State University, 1956-. Established Dept. of Journalism, Memphis State University, 1956. Researcher for Harry S. Truman’s Truman’s Memoirs, May-December, 1954. The Herbert Lee Williams Award for excellence in teaching is awarded each year by the School of Communications at Memphis State University. Died February 16, 2004.
Source:
Contemporary Authors online; Who’s Who in America.
Publication(s):
The Newspaperman’s President; Harry S. Truman. Chicago; Nelson-Hall, 1984.
No Room for Doubt. Nashville; Broadman Press, 1976.
Joint Publication(s):
Newspaper Organization and Management. Ames; Iowa State College Press, 1955.
Contributor:
Modern Journalism. New York; Pitman Pub. Co., 1962.
WILLIAMS, HORACE G. (MRS.)
See:
Williams, Margaret Johnson
WILLIAMS, HORACE RANDALL, 1951-
Biography;
Publisher; editor. Born– June 22, 1951, Chambers County. Education–Samford University. Began his career as a journalist and free-lance writer; worked at the Southern Poverty Law Center, 1976-86; founded its Klanwatch Project, 1980. Founded and operated the Black Belt Press, 1986-1999. co-founded the NewSouth Press in 2000 (with partner Suzanne LaRosa), served as its editor-in-chief.
Source;
NewSouth books website.
Publications;
Johnnie Carr. NewSouth, 2001.
No Man’s Yoke on My Shoulders: Personal Accounts of Slavery in Florida. John F. Blair, Publisher, 2005.
One Hundred Things You Need to Know about Alabama. Whitman Publishing, 2016.
W.E.B. DuBois: A Scholar’s Courageous Life. NewSouth, 2001.
Weren’t No Good Times: Personal Accounts of Slavery in Alabama. John F. Blair, 2004.
Joint_Publications;
History Refused to Die: The Enduring Legacy of African American Art in Alabama. Tinwood Books, 2015.
Sports Rehabilitation and the Human Spirit: How the Landmark Program at the Lakeshore Foundation Rebuilds Bodies and Restores Lives. NewSouth, 2013.
This Day in Civil Rights History. New South, 2009.
Editor;
Alabama Guide: Our People, Resources, and Government2009. Montgomery: Alabama Department of Archives and History, 2009.
The Ku Klux Klan: A History of Racism and Violence. Montgomery: Klanwatch, 1982.
WILLIAMS, IRENE, 1901-
Biography:
High school teacher. Born– 1901 in Gadsden, Ala. Parents– Joseph Eugene and Minne Stella (Moore) Williams. Education– Alabama College, A.B.; Peabody College, M.A.; attended Columbia, Duke, Harvard, George Washington Universities.
Source:
Alabama Department of Archives & History.
Publication(s):
These Are Mine; One Williams Family Lineage. Washington, D.C., 1964.
WILLIAMS, JOHN M.
Biography:
College professor. Born–Auburn. Education–Auburn. Ran a printing business in Auburn. Taught at LaGrange College for twenty-six years.
Publications;
Village People: Sketches of Auburn. Solomon and George Publishers, 2016.
WILLIAMS, JULIE HEDGEPETH,
University professor of journalism; writer. Education: Principia College (Elsah, Ill.), B.A.; Ph. D., University of Alabama. Professor of journalism, Samford University.
Publications;
Wings of Opportunity: The Wright Brothers in Montgomery, Alabama, 1910. NewSouth Books, 2010.
A Rare Titanic Family: The Caldwells’ Story of Survival.
The Significance of the Printed Word in Early America: Colonists’ Thoughts on the Role of the Press. Praeger, 1999.
WILLIAMS, LEE ERSKINE, II, 1946-
Biography:
Historian; college professor. Born April 2, 1946, in Jackson, MS. Parents– Lee E. and Ruth Mae (Harris) Williams. Married– Rosetta Cassandra, December 22, 1973. Children– One. Education– Knoxville College, B.A., 1968; East Tennessee State University, M.A., 1970; Mississippi State University, Ph.D., 1975. Taught at Middle Tennessee State University, 1969-1972, University of Alabama, Huntsville, 1972. Director of Office of Multicultural Affairs at UAH. Published papers, articles and reviews in anthologies, proceedings, newspapers and periodicals. Awarded first MLK Award for outstanding faculty and staff at UAH, 2000.
Source:
Contemporary Authors online; Lee Erskine Williams, II, Huntsville, Ala.
Joint Publication(s):
Anatomy of Four Race Riots; Racial Conflict in Knoxville, Elaine (Arkansas), Tulsa, and Chicago, 1919-1921. Hattiesburg; University and College Press of Mississippi, 1972.
Post-War Riots in America, 1919 and 1946: How the Pressures of War Exacerbated American Urban Tensions to the Breaking Point. Lewiston, NY: Mellen, 1991.
WILLIAMS, MARGARET JOHNSON, 1902-1991.
Biography:
Writer. Born– February 6, 1902, in Elkton, Tenn. Parents– George W. and Mary (Hanna) Johnson. Married– Horace G. Williams, June 29, 1923. Education– Judson College, A.B., 1922; University of Texas, A.M., 1924. Wrote Christian training literature for Southern Baptist Sunday School Board, twenty years. Died Feb. 6, 1991.
Source:
Alabama Public Library Service; Mrs. Horace G. Williams, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Publication(s):
Almost Sixty Years Together. Birmingham, Ala.; Delene W. Williams, 1986.
Fighters for Freedom. Nashville; Convention Press, 1958.