Born on Beale Street, then known as a jazz haunt in Memphis, he went to Nashville, earning both a bachelor's and a master's degrees at
Tennessee State University, a public university and
HBCU. He became a high school teacher at Booker T. Washington High School upon returning to Memphis in 1930. Since 1928 he had been an at-large journalist for Black newspaper
Memphis World. Williams was also Master of Ceremonies for Amateur Night on Beale Street, officiating at a raucous roundup in 1935 at the Old Palace Theater. He was not known as a musician but rather as promoter, entertainer and mentor to Black youth.
Rufus Thomas attended Booker T. Washington where he met Williams, a history teacher who schooled him in both academics and comedy routines and who, after graduation, brought Rufus in as his sidekick hosting Amateur Night at the Palace Theater. Another of his students, Judge
Benjamin Hooks, went on to the state legislature and would later also head the
NAACP. In 1935 Williams was a co-founder with Dr. Ransom Q. Venson of the Cotton Makers Jubilee and is credited with naming the celebration on a historical plaque on Beale st. The depression era cotillion was Black-organized, with its Kings and Queens and Krewes, and continued thru the '90s, steadily losing the parades down Beale Street, the grand Memphis balls, the fireworks and the hurley burley of the
midway, itself a bygone celebration of when the city was epicenter of the cotton crop. The Black court held the Jubilees, the white court a carnival, which survives to this day as the Memphis Carnival. ==WDIA-AM==