During World War I, Captain Williams was assigned to command the division's 51st Company in the 2nd Battalion,
5th Marines Regiment. On June 3, 1918, a brigade of Marines was sent to support the French army at the
Battle of Belleau Wood. Lloyd Williams was serving as the commander of the 51st Company, 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines. As the Marines arrived, they found French troops retreating. When advised to withdraw by a French colonel at the defensive line just north of the village of
Lucy-le-Bocage, Williams bluntly replied: "Retreat, hell! We just got here!" On June 11, 1918, Williams led an assault that routed the German defenders at Belleau Wood near
Chateau-Thierry, France. Only one of the ten officers and 16 of the 250 enlisted men survived or escaped injury. According to a French major's report, after he ordered Williams to withdraw, Williams told him to "go to hell." Later, when Williams had been gassed and injured by
shrapnel and lay wounded on the battlefield, he told the approaching medics, "Don't bother with me. Take care of my good men." He later died from a shell explosion as he was being evacuated. Captain Williams was posthumously promoted to the rank of major. ==Awards==