Williams was born on March 7, 1889, in
Macon, Mississippi, to Daniel Webster Williams and Sarah Marshall Ames. He was the grand-nephew of Confederate General
James Longstreet. Just after his birth, he and his parents moved to Jackson, Ohio. As his father was owner and editor of the
Jackson Standard Journal, he grew up around writing, printing, and editing. In high school he worked for the
Journal, doing grunt work in the beginning and eventually writing and editing. He attended Dartmouth College and upon graduation in 1910 was offered a job teaching English at a boys' school in Connecticut. He telegraphed his father seeking career advice, but his handwriting was terrible and the telegraph company clerk mistook "teaching" for "traveling", and the father, not wanting his son to become a traveling businessman, advised him not to take the job. Richard Cary says it later saved Williams from "a purgatory of grading endless, immature English 'themes'" and propelled him "toward a career as one of the most popular storytellers of his time". After graduation, he took a job reporting for the
Boston American. Williams worked hard reporting for the local newspaper, but only did this for income; his heart lay with magazine fiction. Each night he worked on his fiction writing with the aspiration that one day, his stories would support himself, his wife, Florence Talpey, and their children, Roger, Ben, and Penelope. ==Career==