History of Franklin, Texas![]()
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Walter Washington Williams, who came to Texas in 1870, and later settled on a twenty-acre farm at Eaton on the Shiloh road southeast of Franklin, was reported to be the last surviving soldier of the Civil War. According to the records of the family, Williams was born in 1842, and died on December 19, 1959. He was a Mississippian
by birth. In 1949, Frank X. Tolbert, Sr., a feature writer for the Dallas
Morning News, set out to visit the last three survivors of the War Between
the States and drove to Robertson County to interview Williams. Tolbert
found the old gentleman on his front porch where he was asked for his
formula for living over a century, which was as follows: In the last ten years of Williams' life he became an interesting personality. Radio and newspaper reporters interviewed him and public relations men made good copy of his opinions. He was taken on airplane rides, dined in fashionable places, and given special honors by various groups. He was addressed by honorary titles. Some called him "Trooper Williams," others referred to him as "Honorable Colonel," and still others addressed him as "Five Star General Walter Washington Williams." When he died in 1959, at the age of 117, the government observed official days of mourning. Funeral services were conducted at Mount Pleasant and he was buried there, taking with him the answers to questions that had been asked about him. Whether "General Williams" was actually the last veteran of the Civil War to die, and whether he was 117 years of age or "only 104," even whether he actually served as a forage master under General Hood, or served at all, now seems relatively unimportant. Indeed, one is inclined to agree with the research director for Texas historical markers who wrote:
Walter Williams was indeed an interesting man. He had been married to his second wife over sixty-five years and at least twelve children survived him. He once stated that his father had lived to the age of 119 years, and his ambition was to reach 120. Like in other places, the people of Franklin enjoy reading of distinguished men and women who were citizens in their area of the county in past years. Some of them were residents of the town and others lived in the communities removed from the center of the county. |