Home Page About the Archive Introduction Enter Exhibit About John A. Williams link to register Credits
Home Page Archive introduction enter exhibit About John A. Williams Papers credits

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Note: Case 21 contains audio and video clips.
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Case One

 

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I grew up in Syracuse, New York, apple-knocker country, where summers are splendid and winters war against the psyche. Black people seem to have entered Syracuse history around 1769. My father's grandmother, Margaret Smallwood, was born in 1820, and she married Gorman Williams in 1838.


My mother’s grandfather was Anthony Jones, who was born in Mississippi in 1830 and died at the age of eighty-two in 1912. My mother, Ola (the only one in her family with an African name), who passed away in 1987 at eighty-three, recalls as a child trying to chase a fly from beneath the netting that had been stretched over Grampa Tony’s open coffin; she recalls church bells tolling beyond what she was used to counting. Grampa Tony had two wives and two sets of children; from the second came my grandfather, Joseph David Jones, who himself had two wives, but not the two sets of kids.


My mother was the eldest daughter of J. D. Jones. In the eastern region of Nigeria her name means Keeper of the Beautiful House; and in the western region, He Who Wants to Be Chief. Both terms apply to her. My mother left Mississippi in her late teens to work in Watertown, New York. When she’d paid off the expenses of her travel, she moved to Syracuse, where she met my father, whom she used to refer to as a sheik, or a lounge lizard.

scanned photo

Williams at age three, in Syracuse, N.Y. 1928.

 
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Williams with his sister Lois. 1927.

 
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Williams's mother, Ola. 1938.

 
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The family photo was taken in summer, which explains the hole in my shoe. These were, as I recall, rather good times for us. During the summer, we got sneakers to wear. (For weeks, thereafter, I felt when I wore them that I could fly and run faster and farther than anyone else.) With the approach of school in September, we got new clothes and shoes, and my parents hoped they’d last. Obviously, mine did not. Nevertheless, you did not have a photo taken wearing sneakers. Although they cannot be seen, I am sure my father was wearing spats. Family photos were very special.
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Photograph of the Williams family: (l-r) sister Ruth; father, John Henry; Williams; sister Helen; mother, Ola Mae. 830 S. McBride St., Syracuse, N.Y. 1934 or 1935.

 
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scanned typescript

"BEFORE ELECTRICITY 1927." Original typescript of poem. Signed by Williams. 1984/1986.

The poem “Before Electricity 1927” is simply about a very young person (as I was) living in a house that had gas jets instead of electricity.
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scanned photo

Williams with friend Dave (Slick) Branch in “zoot suits.” Almond St., Syracuse, N.Y. 1941.

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Troop 47, Dunbar Center. Herbert “Hoppie” Johnson, surrogate father, crouches front row, left; Williams sits next to him.
13 November 1937.

scanned bookjacket for callaloo #21

"MORE JOURNEYS WITHOUT TITLE,"
Callaloo #21. Vol. 7, No. 2 (Spring-Summer 1984); 83-85.

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