The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio Buffalo Soldier dies at 98

Affable WWII hero also was community activist

- Holly Zachariah Columbus Dispatch USA TODAY NETWORK

He wore a Buffalo Soldier hat. He had the emblem of his all-african American cavalry regiment emblazoned on his T-shirts. And when Mr. John B. Williams introduced himself to you — because that is always how he said it — his historic service to his country during World War II inevitably came up.

But Williams never bragged. He had no bluster, no puffed-out-chest blow. And he always asked about you first.

The pride he had for all that he had done was clear. Williams was a public servant. A patriot. A history-maker. A civil rights fighter.

So, when asked, he would indeed talk about what he’d done.

Williams, whose family says he was the last surviving Buffalo Soldier in Ohio — it is difficult to find how many are left in all — died on Friday at the age of 98, just six weeks after losing his wife of more than 70 years, Geraldine.

“His health had been failing, but until Geraldine passed he was managing. He was strong. I had visited not long ago and had a wonderful day,” said lifelong friend Charlene Watkins, the minister of Christian education at Mount Olivet Baptist Church on the East Side. “They had been married 72 years and the two became one. And he just kind of never recovered after his wife died.”

Williams was drafted into the Army in 1943 and, when assigned to the 28th Horse-ridden Cavalry Regiment, he became a Buffalo Soldier, the storied all-black unit that dated back to service on the Western frontier after the American Civil War.

In an interview with The Dispatch in 2008, Williams reflected on his service, saying with a laugh that he still remembered the neck brand of the horse he was given: 6U75. He named him Peanut.

“They plucked me from the streets of Columbus and next thing I know, I’m looking at a mountain with legs,” Williams said. “But I’m as proud of my spurs as the Tuskegee Airmen are of their wings.”

Williams’ regiment was located at Camp Lockett, California, where they provided defense as the country prepared for war. Eventually, Williams’ unit deployed to the European Theater in WWII and was redesignat­ed as a pontoon company. He served in combat with the 7th Army in North Africa, Italy, France, Germany and Belgium.

His military awards included the European-african-middle Eastern Campaign Medal with Silver Star; WWII Victory Medal with Bronze Star; American Campaign Medal; Good Conduct Medal; and Knight of the Legion of Honor Medal – French Republic.

He was so proud of his service, but being a family man and a man of God really is where Williams found life’s greatest joys, said his daughter, Carla Bailey.

“His foundation was family,” said Bailey, 60, of the Far East Side. “Daddy has left a phenomenal legacy and that gave him peace, knowing that we would keep the foundation that he built. ‘I want you to carry on what me and Mom always talked about. Take care of family.’ And we will.”

Williams and his younger brother, John, were orphaned as children after their parents died within a few months of one another. The two lived at the Franklin County Children’s Home for years until a family friend adopted the boys.

It was that humble upbringing that forged her father’s belief in fighting for others and standing up to right wrongs, Bailey said.

After his military service, Williams graduated from Ohio State University and later went to work for the U.S. Postal Service. With a college degree in hand, he wondered why he kept getting passed over for promotions. But in reality, he knew why, his daughter recalled. It was because of the color of his skin.

So in 1974, Williams filed a class action complaint of discrimina­tion against management at the Columbus Post Office. While it didn’t help him, the complaint led to the implementa­tion of an affirmative action plan that removed politics from the postal promotion process and created equal employment opportunit­ies for minorities and women.

Williams, who had been living in Berwick before more recently staying with Bailey, retired after a 30-year career.

“Daddy took so much pride in watching so many move up because of the stand that he took,” Bailey said. “No matter what you are going through and what your circumstan­ces are, you can see that light at the end of that tunnel if you have faith.”

Every day, her parents would kneel at the side of the bed and pray. And they taught their five children the value of a life lived in service.

“We were raised ... to minister to those who needed ministered to,” she said. “There was never negativity in our home against anyone. Somebody is sick. Go visit. Someone needs food. You take it. His philosophy in life was the Ten Commandmen­ts. They were his backbone.”

In addition to his military service, Williams made an impact in his community through his civil rights activism, leadership and volunteeri­ng. He wrote a column for years in the Columbus Call & Post, and never hesitated to call out politician­s and community leaders who he thought were doing wrong.

Among his many honors were inductions into both the Ohio Civil Rights Hall of Fame and the Ohio Veterans Hall of Fame.

At the end of the day, Williams was always just trying to leave things better than he found them.

“I can’t remember too many times when Mr. Williams wasn’t smiling. He loved his community so much,” said Watkins, who was a next-door neighbor of Williams’ when they were just children. “He did not mind sharing his journey, and he made the world a better place.”

In addition to Bailey and her husband, Jonathon Sr., Williams’ survivors include children John (Terrie) Williams, Ronald Williams, Cheryl (Dale) Patterson, and Carolyn (Stephen Sr.) Francis; nine grandchild­ren and seven great-grandchild­ren.

Private funeral services are set for Saturday at Resurrecti­on Missionary Baptist Church, 258 Hosack St., where a walk-through visitation will be held from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. The 9 a.m. service will be livestream­ed on the church’s website and on the funeral home website at www.diehl-whittaker.com. hzachariah@dispatch.com @hollyzacha­riah

At least 13 people died after an SUV packed with dozens of passengers collided with a semitruck near the U.s.mexico border in California on Tuesday, according to officials with El Centro Regional Medical Center.

“We believe there was 27 passengers in this SUV that struck a semitruck full of gravel,” emergency room managing director Judy Cruz said in a Facebook Live video.

Fourteen died at the scene, Cruz said. California Highway Patrol Officer Jack Sanchez told USA TODAY the crash involved a big rig and a Ford Expedition at the intersecti­on of State Route 115 and Norrish Road near Holtville, California, about 50 miles west of Arizona and 10 miles north of the border.

The big rig was heading north on the highway and the SUV was heading west, Sanchez said. The SUV came to a stop at the intersecti­on, and then, “for unknown reasons,” the driver “pulled directly in front of the big rig,” which hit the left side of the SUV, Sanchez said.

Seven patients were taken to El Centro Regional Medical Center, where one person died, Cruz said. The hospital had called for air support from other agencies to transport three of the patients to other facilities, she said. Two patients were taken to Pioneers Memorial Hospital in Brawley, California, Cruz said.

Four patients were airlifted to the trauma center at Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs, California, hospital spokespers­on Todd Burke said. Three were in intensive care.

The big rig driver suffered “multiple injuries,” but it was not immediatel­y clear if the driver was among the patients transporte­d to the hospital, Sanchez said. He confirmed at least 12 fatalities.

Archival imagery from Google Maps shows a cross at the same intersecti­on. At least two other fatal accidents have happened at the same location, according to UC Berkeley’s Transporta­tion Injury Mapping System.

“This is a major accident,” said Dr. Adolphe Edward, chief executive officer at El Centro Regional Medical Center. “We are taking care of them in the emergency room department.”

The Imperial County emergency services office responded to the “mass fatality incident”at 6:16 a.m. Pacific, deputy fire chief Sal Flores told the Los Angeles Times. Imperial County Fire department told USA TODAY multiple agencies were responding to the scene.

Customs and Border Protection was on the scene to help the Imperial County Sheriff’s Office and was not involved in the incident, spokespers­on Macario Mora told USA TODAY.

Contributi­ng: Emily Lecoz and Janet Loehrke, USA TODAY

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 ?? TOM DODGE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH FILE ?? John B. Williams straighten­s his tie at the Ohio Statehouse before being inducted into the Ohio Civil Rights Commission’s Civil Rights Hall of Fame in 2014.
TOM DODGE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH FILE John B. Williams straighten­s his tie at the Ohio Statehouse before being inducted into the Ohio Civil Rights Commission’s Civil Rights Hall of Fame in 2014.
 ?? TOM DODGE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH FILE ?? Geraldine Poindexter Williams and John B. Williams at the Poindexter Village exhibit opening at the Ohio History Connection in 2018.
TOM DODGE/COLUMBUS DISPATCH FILE Geraldine Poindexter Williams and John B. Williams at the Poindexter Village exhibit opening at the Ohio History Connection in 2018.
 ?? KYMA VIA AP ?? First responders work at the scene of a deadly crash involving a semitruck and an SUV in Holtville, Calif., on Tuesday.
KYMA VIA AP First responders work at the scene of a deadly crash involving a semitruck and an SUV in Holtville, Calif., on Tuesday.

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