- William of Wales, Prince (British prince)
William, prince of Wales is the elder son of Charles III and Diana, princess of Wales, and the heir apparent to the British throne. William is one of the most popular members of the British royal family, and he has come to personify the modern monarchy. William is the first British heir apparent
- William pear (fruit)
pear: History and types: …widely grown pear variety is Williams’ Bon Chrétien, known in the United States as Bartlett. In the United States and Canada, varieties such as Beurré Bosc, Anjou, and Winter Nelis are grown. A highly popular variety in England and the Netherlands is Conference. Common Italian varieties include Curato, Coscia, and…
- William Preston Lane, Jr., Memorial Bridge (bridge, Maryland, United States)
Chesapeake Bay: The William Preston Lane, Jr., Memorial Bridge spans the upper bay near Annapolis, Maryland. It was opened to traffic in 1952 and is 4 miles (6.4 km) long. The Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel was completed across the lower bay in 1964. The bay forms part of the…
- William R. Warner and Company, Inc. (American company)
Warner-Lambert Company, former diversified American corporation that manufactured products ranging from pharmaceuticals to candy. It became part of U.S. pharmaceutical conglomerate Pfizer Inc. in 2000. The company dates to 1856, when William Warner, a Philadelphia pharmacist, invented the
- William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art and Mary Atkins Museum of Fine Arts (museum, Kansas City, Missouri, United States)
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, art museum in Kansas City, Missouri, that ranks among the 10 largest in the United States. (Read Sister Wendy’s Britannica essay on art appreciation.) Opened in 1933, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art has more than 40,000 works of art. The museum’s outstanding feature is
- William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (film by Luhrmann [1996])
Baz Luhrmann: He followed with Romeo + Juliet (1996), a modern reinterpretation of Shakespeare’s play, set in Miami Beach, Florida; it starred Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes. Moulin Rouge! (2001) is a musical set in Paris at the turn of the 20th century. Together those three films became
- William Tell (opera by Rossini)
Gioachino Rossini: …the most widely heard is William Tell (1829).
- William Tell (play by Schiller)
William Tell, verse drama in five acts by German dramatist Friedrich Schiller, published and produced in 1804 as Wilhelm Tell. During the 15th century, in the Swiss canton of Uri, the legendary hero Wilhelm Tell leads the people of the forest cantons in rebellion against tyrannical Austrian rule.
- William Tell Overture (musical composition by Rossini)
William Tell Overture, composition by Gioachino Rossini. The overture premiered in Paris on August 3, 1829, and constituted the introductory dozen minutes of the composer’s last opera, Guilllaume Tell (William Tell). For many Americans, the work is irrevocably remembered for its exciting final
- William the Aetheling (duke of Normandy)
William the Aetheling was an Anglo-Norman prince, the only son of Henry I of England and recognized duke of Normandy (as William IV, or as William III if the earlier claim of his uncle, William Rufus, is not acknowledged). He succeeded his uncle, the imprisoned Duke Robert II Curthose. In
- William the Bad (king of Sicily)
William I was the Norman king of Sicily, an able ruler who successfully repressed the conspiracies of the barons of his realm. His epithet was bestowed on him by his hapless enemies. He patronized science and letters and showed religious tolerance; among those who frequented his court were many
- William the Bastard (king of England)
William I was a noble who made himself the mightiest in France and then changed the course of England’s history through his conquest of that country in 1066. One of the greatest soldiers and rulers of the Middle Ages, he was duke of Normandy from 1035 and king of England, as William I, from 1066
- William the Conqueror (king of England)
William I was a noble who made himself the mightiest in France and then changed the course of England’s history through his conquest of that country in 1066. One of the greatest soldiers and rulers of the Middle Ages, he was duke of Normandy from 1035 and king of England, as William I, from 1066
- William the Good (king of Sicily)
William II was the last Norman king of Sicily; under a regency from 1166, he ruled in person from 1171. He became known as William the Good because of his policy of clemency and justice toward the towns and the barons, in contrast with his father, William I the Bad. After the regency of his mother,
- William the Lion (king of Scotland)
William I was the king of Scotland from 1165 to 1214; although he submitted to English overlordship for 15 years (1174–89) of his reign, he ultimately obtained independence for his kingdom. William was the second son of the Scottish Henry, Earl of Northumberland, whose title he inherited in 1152.
- William the Marshal (English regent)
William Marshal, 1st earl of Pembroke was a marshal and then regent of England who served four English monarchs—Henry II, Richard I, John, and Henry III—as a royal adviser and agent and as a warrior of outstanding prowess. Marshal’s father, John (FitzGilbert) the Marshal (died 1165), fought for the
- William the Silent (stadholder of United Provinces of The Netherlands)
William I was the first of the hereditary stadtholders (1572–84) of the United Provinces of the Netherlands and leader of the revolt of the Netherlands against Spanish rule and the Catholic religion. William, the eldest son of William, count of Nassau-Dillenburg, grew up in a cultivated Lutheran
- William the Wise (landgrave of Hesse-Kassel)
William IV was the landgrave (or count) of Hesse-Kassel from 1567 who was called “the Wise” because of his accomplishments in political economy and the natural sciences. The son of the landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, he participated with his brother-in-law Maurice of Saxony in the princely
- William Trent House (building, Trenton, New Jersey, United States)
Trenton: The restored William Trent House (1719) is the city’s oldest landmark. The gilt-domed State House (1792) is adjacent to the New Jersey State Cultural Center, which contains a museum, auditorium, planetarium, and state library. The Old Barracks (1758–59; erected as winter quarters for British troops during the…
- William V (count of Holland)
Jülich: William V of Jülich, through his marriage in 1328 to the daughter of Count William III of Holland, became the brother-in-law of Emperor Louis IV, who made Jülich a margravate in 1336, and of Edward III of England, whom he helped to secure an alliance…
- William V (duke of Aquitaine)
France: The principalities of the south: …and again, more imposingly, under William V (994/5–1029), who was acclaimed as one of the greatest rulers of his day and even offered the imperial crown in 1024. An advocate of religious reform, William sought to strengthen his control over Aquitaine by promoting alliances with the monasteries and imposing his…
- William V (prince of Orange and Nassau)
William V was the prince of Orange and Nassau and general hereditary stadtholder of the Dutch Republic (1751–95). When his father, William IV, died (1751), he was but three years of age, and his mother, Anne of Hanover, acted as regent for him until her death (Jan. 12, 1759); then the provincial
- William VI (king of The Netherlands)
William I was the king of the Netherlands and grand duke of Luxembourg (1815–40) who sparked a commercial and industrial revival following the period of French rule (1795–1813), but provoked the Belgian revolt of 1830 through his autocratic methods. The son of William V, prince of Orange, William
- William X (duke of Aquitaine)
William X was the duke of Aquitaine and of Gascony (1127–37), son of William IX. In 1131 he recognized the antipope Anaclet and supported him until 1134. In 1136 he ravaged Normandy. The following year he went on a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, where he died. His daughter,
- William, Fort (fort, Kolkata, India)
Fort William, citadel of Calcutta (now Kolkata), named for King William III of England. The British East India Company’s main Bengal trading station was moved from Hooghly (now Hugli) to Calcutta in 1690 after a war with the Mughals. Between 1696 and 1702 a fort was built in Calcutta, with the
- William, Mount (mountain, Victoria, Australia)
Victoria: Relief: …in the western region is Mount William (3,829 feet [1,167 metres]) in the Grampians.
- William, prince of Wales (British prince)
William, prince of Wales is the elder son of Charles III and Diana, princess of Wales, and the heir apparent to the British throne. William is one of the most popular members of the British royal family, and he has come to personify the modern monarchy. William is the first British heir apparent
- William, Warren (American actor)
Roy Del Ruth: Early films: …and Employees’ Entrance (1933) starred Warren William as an unscrupulous department-store manager who wreaks havoc on the lives of those around him. Del Ruth handled five more films in 1933: The Little Giant, with Edward G. Robinson in good comic form as a beer baron who, after the repeal of…
- Williams College (college, Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States)
Williams College, private, coeducational institution of higher learning opened in 1791 and founded as a college in 1793 at Williamstown, Massachusetts, U.S. Like many other New England colleges, Williams was established by the Congregational church, but it is now nondenominational. It offers
- Williams Lake Stampede (cultural event, British Columbia, Canada)
British Columbia: The arts: The Williams Lake Stampede is the great annual rodeo event of the ranching country of the interior. Even the annual Pacific National Exhibition in Vancouver is largely oriented to the agricultural communities of the lower Fraser valley rather than to the urban interest of Vancouver. Other…
- Williams Landing (Mississippi, United States)
Greenwood, city, seat (1871) of Leflore county, northwestern Mississippi, U.S. It lies along the Yazoo River, 96 miles (154 km) north of Jackson. The original settlement (1834), known as Williams Landing, was incorporated (1844) and named for the Choctaw chieftain Greenwood Leflore, a wealthy
- Williams tube (computing device)
Sir Frederic Williams: …electrical engineer who invented the Williams tube store, a cathode-ray-tube memory system that heralded the beginning of the computer age.
- Williams’ Bon Chrétien pear (fruit)
pear: History and types: …widely grown pear variety is Williams’ Bon Chrétien, known in the United States as Bartlett. In the United States and Canada, varieties such as Beurré Bosc, Anjou, and Winter Nelis are grown. A highly popular variety in England and the Netherlands is Conference. Common Italian varieties include Curato, Coscia, and…
- Williams, Abigail (American colonist)
Salem witch trials: Fits and contortions: …Betty (age 9), his niece Abigail Williams (age 11), and their friend Ann Putnam, Jr. (about age 12), began indulging in fortune-telling. In January 1692 Betty’s and Abigail’s increasingly strange behaviour (described by at least one historian as juvenile deliquency) came to include fits. They screamed, made odd sounds, threw…
- Williams, Alberto (Argentine composer)
Latin American music: The early 20th century: …in the early 20th century, Alberto Williams, exerted a fundamental influence in his country by relying on the music of the gauchos (cowboys of the pampas, or plains). This gauchesco tradition was evident in his Aires de La Pampa (1944; “Songs of the Pampas,” a collection of more than 50…
- Williams, Allen Lane (British publisher)
Sir Allen Lane was a 20th-century pioneer of paperback publishing in England. His belief in a market for high-quality books at low prices helped to create a new reading public and also led to improved printing and binding techniques. In 1919 Lane was apprenticed to his uncle, publisher John Lane of
- Williams, Allison (American actress)
Black horror: History of Black horror: …white girlfriend, Rose (played by Allison Williams), to her home to meet her parents for the first time. There Chris uncovers a sinister plot. In 2018 Get Out won the Academy Award for best original screenplay. The American Film Institute included Get Out in its 2017 list of top movies…
- Williams, Alpheus (United States Army officer)
Battle of Antietam: Battle for the Cornfield and Bloody Lane: Alpheus Williams, who led the corps well; after heavy fighting, Hood and D.H. Hill were driven back. Again, want of support checked the Federals, and the fight became stationary, with both sides losing many thousands of men.
- Williams, Anson (American actor)
Happy Days: …and his pal Potsie (Anson Williams). The boys fraternized with the crowd at Arnold’s Malt Shop, where they sipped floats, dumped dimes into the jukebox, fretted about girls, and lamented the minor misunderstandings they had with their parents. Although Ritchie was the show’s protagonist, the most indelible character was…
- Williams, Audrey (American musician)
Hank Williams: …of his tumultuous relationship with Audrey Sheppard, whom he married in 1942 (they divorced in 1952).
- Williams, Augusta (American ballerina)
Augusta Maywood was the first American ballerina to achieve international renown. Augusta Williams was the daughter of itinerant English actors. She acquired the name of her stepfather, the theatrical manager Robert Campbell Maywood, when she was three. She began studying ballet under Paul H.
- Williams, Barry (American actor)
The Brady Bunch: …the Brady boys, Greg (Barry Williams), Peter (Christopher Knight), and Bobby (Mike Lookinland); the girls, Marcia (Maureen McCormick), Jan (Eve Plumb), and Cindy (Susan Olsen); and Alice Nelson (Ann B. Davis), the wisecracking live-in housekeeper. While the initial season’s
- Williams, Bernard (English philosopher)
Bernard Williams was an English philosopher, noted especially for his writings on ethics and the history of Western philosophy, both ancient and modern. Williams was educated at Chigwell School, Essex, and Balliol College, Oxford. During the 1950s he served in the Royal Air Force (1951–53) and was
- Williams, Bert (American comedian)
Bert Williams was an American comedian who portrayed the slow-witted, shuffling Black man that was then a standard, if racist, role in vaudeville. As a child Williams went to California with his family and worked in the mining and lumber camps of the West. In 1895 his partnership with George W.
- Williams, Betty (Northern Irish activist)
Betty Williams was a Northern Irish peace activist who, with Máiread Maguire and Ciaran McKeown, founded the Peace People, a grassroots movement dedicated to ending the sectarian strife in Northern Ireland. For her work, Williams shared with Maguire the 1976 Nobel Prize for Peace. Williams, an
- Williams, Billy (American baseball player)
Chicago Cubs: …hitting 512 home runs; outfielder Billy Williams (1959–74); second baseman Ryne Sandberg (1982–94, 1996–97); pitcher Ferguson (“Fergie”) Jenkins (1966–73, 1982–83); and third baseman Ron Santo (1960–73).
- Williams, Buck (American basketball player)
Brooklyn Nets: …seasons), and drafted power forward Buck Williams. A tenacious rebounder, Williams was named Rookie of the Year and led the Nets to their first NBA winning record during the 1981–82 season. The Nets qualified for the playoffs that year and in each of the next four, but only once did…
- Williams, C. Greville (British chemist)
rubber: The rise of synthetic rubber: …and in 1860 the Englishman C. Greville Williams broke down rubber by distillation into three parts—oil, tar, and “spirit”—this last part being the more volatile fraction and the main constituent, which Williams named isoprene. The Frenchman Georges Bouchardat, with the aid of hydrogen chloride gas and prolonged distillation, converted isoprene…
- Williams, C.K. (American poet)
C.K. Williams was an American poet who was known for his moral passion and for his lengthy meandering lines of verse, though his early work was characterized by short lines and an acid tone. For his work, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and many other prestigious honors.
- Williams, Charles Kenneth (American poet)
C.K. Williams was an American poet who was known for his moral passion and for his lengthy meandering lines of verse, though his early work was characterized by short lines and an acid tone. For his work, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and many other prestigious honors.
- Williams, Charles Melvin (American musician)
Cootie Williams was an American trumpeter whose mastery of mutes and expressive effects made him one of the most distinctive jazz musicians. Sources differ as to Williams’s birth date; in addition to July 10, 1911, a date of July 24, 1910, is also cited by some. A self-taught trumpeter, Williams
- Williams, Charles, Jr. (American scientist)
telephone: Development of the modern instrument: …common use was introduced by Charles Williams, Jr., in 1882. Designed for wall mounting, this instrument consisted of a ringer, a hand-cranked magneto (for generating a ringing voltage in a distant instrument), a hand receiver, a switch hook, and a transmitter. Various versions of this telephone instrument remained in use…
- Williams, Claude (American baseball player)
Black Sox Scandal: …were pitchers Eddie Cicotte and Claude (“Lefty”) Williams, first baseman Arnold (“Chick”) Gandil, shortstop Charles (“Swede”) Risberg, third baseman George (“Buck”) Weaver, outfielders Joe (“Shoeless Joe”) Jackson and Oscar (“Happy”) Felsch, and utility infielder Fred McMullin. Court records
- Williams, Cleveland (American boxer)
Muhammad Ali: …November 14, 1966, Ali fought Cleveland Williams. Over the course of three rounds, Ali landed more than 100 punches, scored four knockdowns, and was hit a total of three times. Ali’s triumph over Williams was succeeded by victories over Ernie Terrell and Zora Folley.
- Williams, Cliff (British musician)
AC/DC: …1954, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), and Cliff Williams (b. December 14, 1949, Romford, Essex, England).
- Williams, Cootie (American musician)
Cootie Williams was an American trumpeter whose mastery of mutes and expressive effects made him one of the most distinctive jazz musicians. Sources differ as to Williams’s birth date; in addition to July 10, 1911, a date of July 24, 1910, is also cited by some. A self-taught trumpeter, Williams
- Williams, Cyclone Joe (American baseball player)
Smokey Joe Williams was an American baseball player who was an early star of the Negro leagues. Williams was a 6-foot 4-inch (1.93 metre) right-handed pitcher who combined a high-velocity fastball with very good control. Williams was occasionally called “Cyclone,” a nickname, like “Smokey,” derived
- Williams, Daniel Hale (American physician)
Daniel Hale Williams was an American physician and founder of Provident Hospital in Chicago, credited with the first successful heart surgery. Williams graduated from Chicago Medical College in 1883. He served as surgeon for the South Side Dispensary (1884–92) and physician for the Protestant
- Williams, David (British actor, author, and host)
David Walliams is an English comedian, actor, writer, and presenter, who first gained fame with the television show Little Britain, a sketch comedy that he and his frequent collaborator, Matt Lucas, starred in and wrote. Walliams later became a successful children’s book author. Williams grew up in
- Williams, Delores (American singer)
LaVern Baker was an American rhythm-and-blues singer notable for her vocal power and rhythmic energy. At age 17 she performed as Little Miss Sharecropper. Her 1955–65 tenure with Atlantic Records yielded 15 rhythm-and-blues hits, most notably “Tweedle Dee” (1955), “Jim Dandy” (1957), and “I Cried a
- Williams, Denise (American singer)
Johnny Mathis: …a duet with rhythm-and-blues singer Deniece Williams. Additional duets with Williams followed, as well as with other performers, including Dionne Warwick and Gladys Knight.
- Williams, Deron (American basketball player)
Utah Jazz: The Jazz drafted point guard Deron Williams in 2005, and after a three-year absence the team returned to the play-offs in Williams’s second season. Utah beat the Houston Rockets and the Golden State Warriors in the postseason to advance to the conference finals, where the Jazz lost to the eventual…
- Williams, Donald Cary (American philosopher)
universal: Trope nominalism: …nominalists, follow the American philosopher Donald Cary Williams in positing an extra kind of part for things. Williams held that a round red disk, for example, has parts in addition to its concrete spatial parts, such as its upper and lower halves. It also has as parts a particular “redness…
- Williams, Doug (American football player)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Led by quarterback Doug Williams, in 1979 the Bucs—to the surprise of many observers—won 10 games and qualified for the postseason, where they advanced to the conference championship game but lost to the Los Angeles Rams. Tampa Bay went on to playoff berths in both 1981 and 1982,…
- Williams, Edward (Welsh scholar)
Wales: Politics and religion, 1640–1800: …of its key figures was Edward Williams (Iolo Morganwg), whose endeavours encompassed a vast range of literary and historical studies and who also represented the political radicalism inspired by the French Revolution. Radical convictions were held only by a small minority, some of them eccentrics and others distinguished expatriates, but…
- Williams, Edward Bennett (American lawyer)
Edward Bennett Williams was an American lawyer best known for his defense of famous public figures. After graduating summa cum laude from Holy Cross College in Worcester, Massachusetts, he served in the Army Air Force before earning a law degree from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., in
- Williams, Egbert Austin (American comedian)
Bert Williams was an American comedian who portrayed the slow-witted, shuffling Black man that was then a standard, if racist, role in vaudeville. As a child Williams went to California with his family and worked in the mining and lumber camps of the West. In 1895 his partnership with George W.
- Williams, Elizabeth (Northern Irish activist)
Betty Williams was a Northern Irish peace activist who, with Máiread Maguire and Ciaran McKeown, founded the Peace People, a grassroots movement dedicated to ending the sectarian strife in Northern Ireland. For her work, Williams shared with Maguire the 1976 Nobel Prize for Peace. Williams, an
- Williams, Ella Gwendolen Rees (British writer)
Jean Rhys was a West Indian novelist who earned acclaim for her early works set in the bohemian world of Europe in the 1920s and ’30s but who stopped writing for nearly three decades, until she wrote a successful novel set in the West Indies. The daughter of a Welsh doctor and a Creole mother, Rhys
- Williams, Elmo (American director and film editor)
The Vikings: …by the film’s famed editor, Elmo Williams, who had won an Academy Award for his work on the classic High Noon (1952).
- Williams, Emlyn (Welsh actor)
Emlyn Williams was a Welsh actor and playwright, author of some highly effective, often macabre plays. Williams was educated in Geneva and at Christ Church, Oxford. In the 1930s and ’40s he wrote some immensely successful plays, which contained starring parts for himself. The best-known of these
- Williams, Ephraim (North American philanthropist)
Williamstown: …1765 and renamed for Colonel Ephraim Williams, killed in the French and Indian War (1754–63), who had bequeathed money in his will to establish a “free school” there provided the town bear his name. The school was opened in 1791 and chartered as Williams College in 1793. The town’s Sterling…
- Williams, Eric (prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago)
Eric Williams was the first and longtime prime minister of independent Trinidad and Tobago (1962–81), who founded (1956) the People’s National Movement (PNM) and led his country to independence. Williams was educated at Queen’s Royal College, Port of Spain, and at the University of Oxford, from
- Williams, Eric Eustace (prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago)
Eric Williams was the first and longtime prime minister of independent Trinidad and Tobago (1962–81), who founded (1956) the People’s National Movement (PNM) and led his country to independence. Williams was educated at Queen’s Royal College, Port of Spain, and at the University of Oxford, from
- Williams, Esther (American swimmer and actress)
Esther Williams was an American swimming champion who became one of the most popular and profitable Hollywood movie stars of the 1940s and ’50s. Williams was a teenaged swimming champion who set a record for the 100-metre breaststroke in 1939 and won national titles in Seattle, Washington, and
- Williams, Esther Jane (American swimmer and actress)
Esther Williams was an American swimming champion who became one of the most popular and profitable Hollywood movie stars of the 1940s and ’50s. Williams was a teenaged swimming champion who set a record for the 100-metre breaststroke in 1939 and won national titles in Seattle, Washington, and
- Williams, Evan (American computer programmer and entrepreneur)
Evan Williams is an American computer programmer who, with Jack Dorsey and Biz Stone, founded Twitter, an online microblogging service. Williams grew up on a farm but had aspirations of starting his own business, and he left the University of Nebraska at Lincoln without graduating. In the mid-1990s
- Williams, Fannie Barrier (American civic leader and lecturer)
Fannie Barrier Williams was an American social reformer, lecturer, and clubwoman who cofounded (1893) the National League of Colored Women. Williams graduated from the local State Normal School (now the State University of New York College at Brockport) in 1870. Thereafter she taught in freedmen’s
- Williams, George Emlyn (Welsh actor)
Emlyn Williams was a Welsh actor and playwright, author of some highly effective, often macabre plays. Williams was educated in Geneva and at Christ Church, Oxford. In the 1930s and ’40s he wrote some immensely successful plays, which contained starring parts for himself. The best-known of these
- Williams, George Kofi Awoonor (Ghanaian author)
Kofi Awoonor was a Ghanaian novelist and poet whose verse has been widely translated and anthologized. After graduating (1960) from the University College of the Gold Coast (now the University of Ghana, Legon), Awoonor studied at University College, London (M.A., 1970), and the State University of
- Williams, George Washington (American historian)
George Washington Williams was an American historian, clergyman, politician, lawyer, lecturer, and soldier who was the first person to write an objective and scientifically researched history of black people in the United States. The son of a laborer, Williams enlisted at age 14 in the Union Army
- Williams, Grant (American actor)
The Incredible Shrinking Man: …cloud, Scott Carey (played by Grant Williams) discovers that his body is shrinking. As he grows smaller, his understanding of the world—and his role in it—also changes. At one point, he is forced to reside in a dollhouse and battle “giant” spiders and cats just to stay alive. Eventually he…
- Williams, Gus (American basketball player)
Oklahoma City Thunder: …by guards Dennis Johnson and Gus Williams, as well as centre Jack Sikma—winning the rematch in five games to capture the franchise’s first NBA championship. Seattle advanced to the conference finals again in 1979–80 but was eliminated by a Lakers team featuring rookie sensation Magic Johnson.
- Williams, Guy (American actor)
Zorro: Disney’s Zorro series (1957–59), starring Guy Williams as the masked hero, as well as a syndicated live-action show (1990–93) and numerous animated series.
- Williams, Hank (American musician)
Hank Williams was an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist who in the 1950s arguably became country music’s first superstar. An immensely talented songwriter and an impassioned vocalist, he also experienced great crossover success in the popular music market. His iconic status was amplified by
- Williams, Hank, Jr. (American musician)
Hank Williams Jr. is an American country and western musician and one of the most successful and long-lasting performers of the genre. Although in the early years of his career he sang the songs of his legendary father, over time he developed his own voice and sound—a fusion of rock and country
- Williams, Helen Maria (English writer)
Helen Maria Williams was an English poet, novelist, and social critic best known for her support of such radical causes as abolitionism and the French Revolution. The daughter of an army officer, she was privately educated at Berwick-on-Tweed. After she went to London in 1781 to publish her poem
- Williams, Henry Shaler (American paleontologist)
geochronology: Completion of the Phanerozoic time scale: …by the paleontologist and stratigrapher Henry Shaler Williams.
- Williams, Henry Sylvester (Trinidadian lawyer, author and Pan-Africanist)
Pan-Africanism: The Pan-African Congress movement: The organizer was Henry Sylvester Williams, a native of Trinidad. The meeting was attended by several prominent Blacks from Africa, Great Britain, the West Indies, and the United States. Du Bois was perhaps the most-prominent member of U.S. delegation.
- Williams, Hiram King (American musician)
Hank Williams was an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist who in the 1950s arguably became country music’s first superstar. An immensely talented songwriter and an impassioned vocalist, he also experienced great crossover success in the popular music market. His iconic status was amplified by
- Williams, Hosea (American civil rights leader and politician)
Hosea Williams was an American civil rights leader and politician who was a major figure in the struggle against segregation and served with the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., as organizer and advance man. He and John Lewis led the “Bloody Sunday” march in Selma, Alabama, on March 7, 1965, during
- Williams, J. H., III (American artist)
Batwoman: …and the revolutionary artwork of J.H. Williams III. Williams, who had previously worked on Alan Moore’s genre-bending Promethea, redefined the visual expectations of a monthly superhero book with bold pencil work and innovative page layouts that were complex without looking cluttered.
- Williams, Jody (American activist)
Jody Williams is an American activist who helped found the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL). In 1997 she and the campaign were named corecipients of the Nobel Prize for Peace. (Read Nobelist Jody Williams’ Britannica essay on landmines.) In 1984 Williams received a master’s degree
- Williams, Joe (American singer and actor)
Joe Williams was an American singer known for his mastery of jazz, blues, and ballads and for his association with Count Basie in the 1950s. Williams moved from Georgia to Chicago at the age of three. As a youth he sang with a gospel group. In 1937 he joined clarinetist Jimmie Noone’s band, which
- Williams, John (English bishop)
William Laud: Early life and career.: His lifelong conflict with John Williams, later bishop of Lincoln and archbishop of York, began when both sought advancement through the patronage of Charles’s favourite, the Duke of Buckingham. During Buckingham’s years of power, Laud was his chaplain and confidant, and he established a dominant voice in church policies…
- Williams, John (British actor)
Dial M for Murder: Cast: Assorted Referencesdiscussed in biography
- Williams, John (American composer and conductor)
John Williams is an American composer who created some of the most iconic film scores of all time. He scored more than a hundred movies, many of which were directed by Steven Spielberg. Williams is also known for his work on numerous Star Wars films. Williams was raised in New York, the son of a
- Williams, John (English missionary)
Rarotonga: …was the base from which John Williams of the London Missionary Society (who arrived in 1823) sought to Christianize the islands.
- Williams, John A. (American writer)
African American literature: The Black Arts movement: … (1970), and the novels of John A. Williams, particularly The Man Who Cried I Am (1967), a roman à clef about a dying Black novelist intent on maintaining his political integrity in the face of government persecution, communicate the spirit of the new Black ideals. The “tell it like it…
- Williams, John Henry (American economist)
John Henry Williams was an American economist, banker, and government adviser who achieved world renown as an expert on international trade. Williams was educated at Brown University and Harvard, where he obtained his Ph.D. (1919). He was a professor of economics at Harvard (1921–57) and then