In 1938, Williams graduated with honors in English from
Wilberforce University (the oldest private African American college in the U.S.). She received her M.A. in English in from
Fisk University in 1939. For the next two decades, Williams taught at Edward Waters College, Shorter College, Morris Brown College, and at her alma mater, Wilberforce, all A.M.E.-affiliated institutions. She completed her PhD in speech communication in 1959 at the
Ohio State University and immediately joined the faculty of Tennessee State University. After being promoted to full professor of communications, in 1973, Williams became head of her department and served in that capacity until she retired in 1987. Williams made contributions to rhetorical studies, a field long dominated by the study of white male orators. Her dissertation—
A Rhetorical Analysis of Thurgood Marshall’s Arguments Before the Supreme Court in the Public School Segregation Controversy—was published by the Ohio State University in 1959. With her husband, she published a collection of speeches and addresses by African American orators in 1970, titled
The Negro Speaks: The Rhetoric of Contemporary Black Leaders, that brought together the work of African Americans engaged in Black freedom struggles. == Leadership ==