Don Williams, Country Vocalist

Donald Ray Williams was born in Floydada, Texas May 27, 1939 to James Andrew Williams and Loveta Mae Lambert Williams. His grandfather on the Williams side was Emory Rains Williams who was also the grandson of Emory Rains, namesake of Rains County. Don’s father was a carpenter and the family moved from time to time. Don was the youngest of three sons of James and Loveta Mae. By the time Don reached high school age, the parents had either separated or divorced. James remained in West Texas. Don was living with his mother in Portland, Texas where he graduated from Gregory-Portland High School in 1958.

Don served two years in the United States Army Security Agency and received an honorable discharge. Afterward he returned to the Corpus Christi area where he began to engage in his long musical career. He married the former Joy Janene Bucher of Corpus Christi in 1961. A sad family event occurred two years later. In the summer of 1963, Don’s oldest brother Kenneth was electrocuted in an on the job accident at Cisco, Texas. Kenneth was 29 and had come to Cisco about a week earlier to work at an ice plant after spending several years working in the oilfield near Corpus Christi. Kenneth had recently moved in with his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil F. Lambert of Cisco. According to news reports, Kenneth, a single man, had apparently came in contact with a live wire while operating a hoist pulling 300 pound ice blocks from steel containers in the ice plant. Kenneth had come to work at the plant only a few days earlier that week.

Don learned to play the guitar at 12. He and several other Corpus Christi musicians had performed together in various groups. Over time, their association had led to the creation of a group they named the Pozo-Seco Singers. The origin of the group’s name is said to have come from a term on oilfield maps. “Pozo seco” is a Spanish expression for a dry hole, an unsuccessful oil well. The founding members of the group were Williams, Lofton Kline and Susan Taylor. The group was active during the 1960s mostly playing songs in the folk genre. Don played guitar and sang. The group’s first charted song was called “Time” with Taylor on lead vocals. This led to a contract with Columbia Records. Over the next several years, Pozo Seco released several singles and four albums. Their list of recordings also included an album cut of “Guantanamera,” a popular Cuban folk song which they performed in Spanish. It has a similar sound and feel as the charted song by the Sandpipers, but was not released as a single for Pozo Seco.

Later members of Pozo Seco were Ron Shaw and Russell Thornberry. The group eventually disbanded around 1969 or 1970 after the stress of personnel changes and other circumstances. It was further affected by the shift away from folk music and the market’s expansion more into rock. Taylor and Williams were part of the group the entire time. Williams and Taylor also had the longest careers among the members. Taylor went on to enjoy a singing and songwriting career under the name of Taylor Pie while Williams transitioned to a country music career of around four decades. The demise of Pozo Seco can be viewed as a beneficial event for Williams.

Williams moved to Nashville and got a job as a songwriter for “Cowboy Jack” Clement around the same time as fellow Texan Bob McDill who notes that their acquaintance turned into a career long working relationship. In addition to performing his own songs, Williams found success with those written or cowritten by McDill. Eight of McDill’s songs became Number 1 hits for Williams. The list of Williams’ most popular McDill-related songs include “(Turn Out the Light and) Love Me Tonight,” “Say It Again,” “It Must Be Love,” “Good Ole Boys Like Me.”

Don found lasting success as a performer and recording artist. His engagements took him all over the world, including events in Ireland, England, Zimbabwe, New Zealand, Ukraine, Ethiopia, Nigeria, South Africa and many other countries. Many photos show him on stage in casual clothes wearing his old felt hat. Typically he would be sitting on a stool. After a long career, Don made a “farewell tour” in 2006, fully intending to retire. He was quoted as saying that he was ready to get off the road and spend more time with his family. He added that he had been on the road for many of the years since 1965 and that touring did not leave much time for anything else. However, a few years later he was lured back to the studio for two more albums over the next ten years.

Don’s vast discography includes scores of songs that he either wrote or co-wrote and more than two dozen albums. His smooth, easy going style was loved by many. His first Number 1 recording was “I Wouldn’t Want to Live if You Didn’t Love Me” from 1974. He amassed sixteen more number one hits. His best known Number 1 songs are usually considered to be “I Believe in You” from 1980 and “Lord, I Hope This Day is Good” from 1982. He had 52 songs that reached the country music top 40 list. Don’s songs were covered (recorded) by many other artists. A partial listing includes the following: Kenny Rogers, Billie Jo Spears, Bill Medley, Charley Pride, Alison Krauss, Johnny Cash, Eric Clapton, Alan Jackson, Waylon Jennings, Leon Russel, Lefty Frizzell and many others. Don had two film credits: playing himself in “Smokey and the Bandit II” and a character named Leroy in “W. W. and the Dixie Dancekings.” These were both Burt Reynolds projects. Reynolds was known to be a supporter of country music.

During the core of Williams’ career, his sidemen, other musicians who played with him, included Danny Flowers, Biff Watson, Dave Pomeroy and Pat McInerney. Flowers wrote “Tulsa Time” which was one of Williams’ most popular songs. Flowers says that “Tulsa Time” was written while the band was stranded in Tulsa due to a winter storm. Several other songs written by Flowers were recorded by Williams.The four musicians were known as the Scratch Band. They also served as Williams’ studio band for many years. Don produced an album for them back in 1982.

Nicknamed “The Gentle Giant,” Don’s professional recognition includes being voted into the County Music Hall of Fame in 2010. He was named Male Vocalist of the Year in 1978 by the Country Music Association. That same year, his recording of “Tulsa Time” was named the Single Record of the Year by the Academy of Country Music.

Don passed away in 2017 from complications of a respiratory disease. He was survived by his wife of 57 years, their two children and numerous other family members. Don’s ashes were spread in the waters of the Gulf which he loved.

In 2017, a tribute album was released called “Gentle Giants: The Music of Don Williams.” Artists contributing to the recordings are Pistol Annies, Brandy Clark, Lady Antebellum, Dierks Bentley, Chris Stapleton, Alison Krauss, John Prine, Jason Isbell, Amanda Shires, Trisha Yearwood, Keb’ Mo’ and Garth Brooks. It was produced by Don’s long time friend and producer Garth Fundis.

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Isaac Parker, Legislator

Isaac Duke Parker was a son of John and Sarah White Parker. He was born in Georgia on April 7, 1793 and came to Texas as an adult with his family, finally settling in a stockade fort near the current town of Groesbeck in the early 1830s. The circumstances of the raid are probably familiar to many. To summarize, the Parker family consisted of about two dozen people and there were numerous others living in the compound. Many names are similar, adding to the confusion, but below is a rough listing of the family members and close relatives in or near the fort at the time of the attack:

  • John Parker (“Elder John Parker”) – a widower
  • Silas Mercer Parker, Sr. – husband of Lucinda Duty Parker
  • Lucinda Duty Parker – wife of Silas Mercer Parker, Sr.
  • James W. Parker – son of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Cynthia Ann Parker – daughter of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • John Richard Parker – son of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Silas Mercer Parker Jr. – son of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Orlena Parker – daughter of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Sarah Pinson Duty (“Granny Parker”) – mother of Lucinda and Clara Elizabeth
  • Clara Elizabeth Duty Kellogg – sister of Lucinda and recently widowed
  • Benjamin Franklin W. Parker – brother of Elder John
  • Isaac Parker – brother of Elder John
  • Sarah Parker Nixon – daughter of James William
  • Lorenzo Dow Nixon – husband of Sarah Parker Nixon
  • Luther Martin Thomas (“L. T. M.”) Plummer – husband of Rachel
  • Rachel Parker Plummer – wife of Luther, daughter of James William Parker
  • James Pratt Plummer – son of Luther and Rachel
  • James William Parker – father of Rachel
  • Abigail Parker – sister of Elder John
  • Daniel Parker – brother of Elder John
  • Martha “Patsy” Dixon Parker – wife of Daniel
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Ferdinand Jakob Lindheimer

Perhaps less known than others of his time, botanist and naturalist Ferdinand Jakob Lindheimer is called the Father of Texas Botany. Lindheimer was born May 21, 1801 in Frankfurt, Germany. He received his early education in Germany and was teaching there before he was 30 years old. According to accounts, he held political views that were controversial and unpopular for the day in Germany and around 1833, he decided to leave Germany. At that time the prevailing form of government was described as being a loose union of 39 states, dominated by Austria. It is presumed that Lindheimer held to a minority opinion favoring liberalism and democracy. Lindheimer relocated to the United States, living for a while in Illinois and for a year and several months in Mexico with other German expatriates until around 1836. About this time, articles note, he served in the Texas army. Some say that he fought in the Battle of San Jacinto while others hold that he joined soon after the battle.

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Two Early Bullfighters, George Doak & Junior Meek

It’s been said that in rodeo, eight seconds can seem like an eternity. In the early days of rodeo, the role of rodeo clowns began. Initially they provided entertainment by dressing up with face paint and garish costumes. Between events, they would sometimes do stunts, tell jokes and the like. They also stayed in the arena most of the time and during bull riding events, they attempted to distract the bulls after the rider either completed the timed event or got bucked off. As American rodeo expanded and professional organizations developed, the need for specialized protection for the contestants increased.

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Lubbock Tornadoes – May 11, 1970

Spring is often a vulnerable time for West Texas residents when supercell storms pass through the area. Newspapers noted that two people were killed the evening of May 6, 1949 when a tornado struck the north side of the small oilfield community of Sundown, roughly 45 miles west of Lubbock in Hockley County. The next morning, reports announced that two individuals were killed including a young Church of Christ pastor and his three year old daughter. Two more unnamed people were reported missing. Several others were injured and more were said to be trapped in the rubble but no more fatalities were reported. All the missing individuals were located. That same night, tornado activity, part of the same huge storm, was reported in Morton and the wheatland outside Dalhart but there were no fatalities. Near Dalhart, the tornado was said to be on the ground for about twelve miles, but it only destroyed crops. About two weeks later, a twister dropped down in the Soldier Mound community a few miles north of Spur, killing one person and injuring several others. The fatality and a number of those injured were in a residence that was destroyed. A small child, a grandchild of the deceased, was found 100 yards away from her, the but miraculously the child was uninjured. A Baptist church and five farm houses were also destroyed, but there were no other fatalities.

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