Person:Lafayette Williams (4)

Watchers
Lafayette Corzine Williams
Facts and Events
Name Lafayette Corzine Williams
Alt Name C. F. Williams
Alt Name Buddy Williams
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 23 Dec 1845 Sabine, Texas, United States
Death[1][2] 19 Apr 1863 Parker, Texas, United StatesThey found him killed, about one mile west of the Frank Hill place, near the Palo Pinto-Parker county line
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Lafayette Corzine Williams, in Find A Grave.

    This stone sits on a rise beneath a grove of very old oaks. It is a double stone with James W. Williams, father of Lafayette Williams who was the youngest of his 17 children. The inscription reads:

    Emblem of the book of her delight
    I Cor VV Cha (55th chapter)
    The dead shall be raised

    Sacred to the memory
    of
    James W. Williams
    Born March 29, 1792 and
    Died February 25, 1862 also his son
    Lafayette C Williams
    Born Dec 3, 1845 and Died April
    19 AD 1863

    Behold ye stranger Passing by
    As you are now So once was I
    As I am now So you must be
    Prepare for death and follow me

  2. 2.0 2.1 McConnell, Joseph Carroll. The West Texas Frontier. (Texas: Gazette Print, 1933, 1939)
    Vol. 2, Page 480.

    During 1864, Buddy Williams, who lived on the Wm. Auterburn place, went over to the home of Frank Hill to visit his chum, and close friend, Geo. W. Hill, who happened to be away. It was Sunday morning. Young Williams failed to find Geo. W. Hill at home, so he rode away. When Buddy, a boy about seventeen, failed to return home, Bidge Gilbert, Frank Hill, and others went to search for him. They found him killed, about one mile west of the Frank Hill place, near the Palo Pinto-Parker county line, and not a great distance from the northern part of Hood county. Signs seem to indicate that young Williams had run about one-fourth of a mile before he was murdered, no doubt by the Indians, for their signs were seen in the neighborhood. Bud Williams Hollow derived its name from this massacre. He was buried in the Soda Springs Graveyard, in the Littlefield Bend of the Brazos. Note: Author personally interviewed: Geo. W. Hill, chum of Bud Williams; Dave and Bud Littlefield, and one or two others living in the vicinity at the time.