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John H. “Williams the Hatter” Williams

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John H. “Williams the Hatter” Williams Veteran

Birth
Ohio, USA
Death
12 Jan 1934 (aged 86)
Ephrata, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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John H. Williams
Birth: 15 April 1847
Salem, Ohio
Death: 12 January 1934
Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania

John H. Williams, better known as "Williams the Hatter"

A self-made man, one of the youngest business men in the county, and the leading dealer in his line in the coal regions, is John H. Williams, better known as "Williams the Hatter," at the corner of North Center and Market streets, Pottsville. Born in Salem, Ohio, April 15th, 1848, he is, at the age of thirty-three, as the result of his own energy, industry and enterprise, at the head of such a business as men have toiled for until old age came upon them, and toiled in vain.
His father was Dr. Benjamin Williams, a physician of large practice, who died in Rock Island City, Illinois, in 1856, at the age of thirty-seven. His mother, formerly Miss Esther Smith, is living in Sharpsburgh, Pa. The untimely death of Dr. Williams broke up the family, and John H., then only eight years old, went to live with his grandmother, where he busied himself about four years doing farm work and attending a country school.
Early in his boyhood his adventurous spirit asserted itself. His mind was ever reaching out to the great unknown world in which he believed he had a useful career. At the age of thirteen he ran away from home and found himself in Pittsburgh, Pa., without means or friends and entirely upon his own meager resources. He sought employment, for he had never been an idle boy, and secured a place as cash boy in the store of H.J. Lynch, where in about three months his manifest capacity for business won him a promotion to the position of salesman. In 1863 he entered the wholesale notion house of McCrum & Glyde, in the capacity of salesman, and remained there until, in 1864, his youthful daring and love of adventure prompted him to offer his services as drummer boy to Company A of the 45th Pennsylvania volunteers. He was accepted, and served until mustered out with such of his comrades as were living at the close of the war. Returning to Pittsburgh he found employment in the fall of 1865 in the dry goods house of White, Orr & Co., with whom he remained until the following spring, when he found a better position with the firm of Hughes & Hackey. Here he was employed about a year, leaving to engage for a time in other than mercantile pursuits. But his destiny was to become a merchant, and he could not long absent himself from behind the counter. The great city of New York offered inducements to one of his progressive enterprise, and thither he turned his steps in 1867, and obtained a situation as salesman with Foster Brothers, dry good merchants on Eighth avenue. A better position being offered him in the dry goods house of Leder & Brother, 340 Bowery, he entered the service of that firm six months later. In 1869, when the coal region offered rare opportunities for enterprising men of all professions and occupations, Mr. Williams removed to Pottsville, where he was employed in the well remembered dry good store of J. Galland & Co., until April, 1870. At the latter date he established his present business on a small scale, but with reference to those financial principles which, governing its management since, have placed it foremost among the mercantile houses of the Schuylkill coal region.
The credit which attaches to any man who makes his own way in the world, from childhood to a position of responsibility and business prominence, belongs justly to Mr. Williams, whose portrait appears in these pages. Honesty, industry, economy, extension and advancement have been his watchwords. As a business man he enjoys unbounded confidence, as a citizen he identifies himself with projects for the public benefit. As an example to the youth of the county of what a boy with the right stuff in him may accomplish he stands preeminent. He was married February 28th, 1872, to Miss Susie L. Wardle, daughter of William G. Wardle, of Pottsville.

HISTORY OF SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PA with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Some of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers.
New York: W. W. Munsell & Co., 36 Vesey Street, 1881 Press of George Macnamara, 36 Vesey Street, N.Y.

John H. Williams.

Mrs. Mary Patterson, 718 Court street, received word of the death of her brother, John H. Williams, aged 86, at his home in Pottsville on Friday January 12, following a heart attack.

He is survived by his wife and two sisters, Mrs. Pattison of this city and Mrs. Rebecca Jones of Indianapolis, Ind..

Funeral service will be held Tuesday afternoon at Pottsville.

New Castle News (New Castle, Pennsylvania) Monday, 15 January 1934 Pg 2


John H. Williams
Birth: 15 April 1847
Salem, Ohio
Death: 12 January 1934
Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania

John H. Williams, better known as "Williams the Hatter"

A self-made man, one of the youngest business men in the county, and the leading dealer in his line in the coal regions, is John H. Williams, better known as "Williams the Hatter," at the corner of North Center and Market streets, Pottsville. Born in Salem, Ohio, April 15th, 1848, he is, at the age of thirty-three, as the result of his own energy, industry and enterprise, at the head of such a business as men have toiled for until old age came upon them, and toiled in vain.
His father was Dr. Benjamin Williams, a physician of large practice, who died in Rock Island City, Illinois, in 1856, at the age of thirty-seven. His mother, formerly Miss Esther Smith, is living in Sharpsburgh, Pa. The untimely death of Dr. Williams broke up the family, and John H., then only eight years old, went to live with his grandmother, where he busied himself about four years doing farm work and attending a country school.
Early in his boyhood his adventurous spirit asserted itself. His mind was ever reaching out to the great unknown world in which he believed he had a useful career. At the age of thirteen he ran away from home and found himself in Pittsburgh, Pa., without means or friends and entirely upon his own meager resources. He sought employment, for he had never been an idle boy, and secured a place as cash boy in the store of H.J. Lynch, where in about three months his manifest capacity for business won him a promotion to the position of salesman. In 1863 he entered the wholesale notion house of McCrum & Glyde, in the capacity of salesman, and remained there until, in 1864, his youthful daring and love of adventure prompted him to offer his services as drummer boy to Company A of the 45th Pennsylvania volunteers. He was accepted, and served until mustered out with such of his comrades as were living at the close of the war. Returning to Pittsburgh he found employment in the fall of 1865 in the dry goods house of White, Orr & Co., with whom he remained until the following spring, when he found a better position with the firm of Hughes & Hackey. Here he was employed about a year, leaving to engage for a time in other than mercantile pursuits. But his destiny was to become a merchant, and he could not long absent himself from behind the counter. The great city of New York offered inducements to one of his progressive enterprise, and thither he turned his steps in 1867, and obtained a situation as salesman with Foster Brothers, dry good merchants on Eighth avenue. A better position being offered him in the dry goods house of Leder & Brother, 340 Bowery, he entered the service of that firm six months later. In 1869, when the coal region offered rare opportunities for enterprising men of all professions and occupations, Mr. Williams removed to Pottsville, where he was employed in the well remembered dry good store of J. Galland & Co., until April, 1870. At the latter date he established his present business on a small scale, but with reference to those financial principles which, governing its management since, have placed it foremost among the mercantile houses of the Schuylkill coal region.
The credit which attaches to any man who makes his own way in the world, from childhood to a position of responsibility and business prominence, belongs justly to Mr. Williams, whose portrait appears in these pages. Honesty, industry, economy, extension and advancement have been his watchwords. As a business man he enjoys unbounded confidence, as a citizen he identifies himself with projects for the public benefit. As an example to the youth of the county of what a boy with the right stuff in him may accomplish he stands preeminent. He was married February 28th, 1872, to Miss Susie L. Wardle, daughter of William G. Wardle, of Pottsville.

HISTORY OF SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PA with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Some of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers.
New York: W. W. Munsell & Co., 36 Vesey Street, 1881 Press of George Macnamara, 36 Vesey Street, N.Y.

John H. Williams.

Mrs. Mary Patterson, 718 Court street, received word of the death of her brother, John H. Williams, aged 86, at his home in Pottsville on Friday January 12, following a heart attack.

He is survived by his wife and two sisters, Mrs. Pattison of this city and Mrs. Rebecca Jones of Indianapolis, Ind..

Funeral service will be held Tuesday afternoon at Pottsville.

New Castle News (New Castle, Pennsylvania) Monday, 15 January 1934 Pg 2




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  • Created by: yorkies1
  • Added: Jun 11, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/38202218/john_h-williams: accessed ), memorial page for John H. “Williams the Hatter” Williams (15 Apr 1847–12 Jan 1934), Find a Grave Memorial ID 38202218, citing Charles Baber Cemetery, Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by yorkies1 (contributor 47126442).