Ordained a minister in the
Episcopal Church, Rev. Williams served at Zion Episcopal Church in
Dobbs Ferry, New York during the American Civil War. After the war ended, he traveled to
Amherst County, Virginia to visit 35 year old
Indiana Fletcher, whom he had met as a seminarian in New York during her travels. Her late father, teacher turned businessman and farmer
Elijah Fletcher had owned plantations and valuable real estate as well as a cattle trading business in nearby
Lynchburg (receiving cattle from his brother in the state of Indiana and selling them in Virginia), and had helped found
St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Lynchburg as well as Ascension Episcopal Church in Amherst. Indiana Fletcher had inherited much upon his death in 1858 (her troublesome brother Lucien received his inheritance circa 1850, during his father's life), but had never married. Her younger sister Elizabeth, had married, but with her husband had squandered much of that inheritance. After the war, her marriage prospects were minimal, and emancipation of formerly enslaved people had greatly changed plantation management. On August 23, 1865, Rev. Williams married Indiana Fletcher in Amherst County, and the newlyweds took the train back to New York. The bishop of New York granted Rev. Williams permission to retire from his position, although he would later serve as assistant minister in Amherst. J. Henry Williams and his wife had one child, Maria Georgianna "Daisy" Williams (1867-1883). During winters, which her parents spent in New York City, Daisy attended Miss Haines' School in
Gramercy Square; she would die in Manhattan on January 22, 1884. Meanwhile, Williams and his wife resumed operation of Sweet Briar plantation. Williams was later elected the Amherst county clerk, although he used experienced deputies to perform those functions. In 1867, voters of
Amherst,
Nelson and
Buckingham Counties elected Williams to the
Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868. Although he had never served in the Confederate forces (and his black sheep brother-in-law Lucian Fletcher had been demoted to private and spent much of the American Civil War subject to Confederate courts martial and jails), and military governor Gen. Schofield considered him a
Republican, Rev. Williams often voted with the Convention's conservative members and vehemently objected to clauses disenfranchising former Confederates as beyond the Convention's authority. Although the Convention approved such clauses, the following year, voters rejected them, while overwhelmingly approving the Constitution of 1869 as a whole. In New York City, Williams operated a small hotel at 260 4th Avenue during the winters, but closed it and returned to the mountains of Amherst County during the summers. Thus, the 1880 census found him (as a minister and farmer) in Virginia, and also tabulated his wife Indiana and their daughter Maria (nicknamed Daisy). ==Death==