Dr. J. L. Williamson Called –
Burnet
and this entire section of Burnet County were deeply
saddened
Thursday morning when word came that Dr.
J. L. Williamson
was dead. He had been critically ill for some time,
and for almost
three weeks had been under treatment at the Scott
& White Hospital
in Temple. When he was first stricken, his family and
many friends had
hope for his ultimate recovery, but during the past
few weeks they
realized that the end was only a matter of days, but
this did not
lessen the shock and grief of his passing.
The body was prepared
for burial by the
Briggs-Gamel Funeral Home of Lampasas, and his funeral
service was held
at 4:00 o’clock, Friday afternoon in the First Baptist
Church of
Burnet, conducted by its pastor, Rev.
R. E. Harrison,
who paid a glowing and deserved tribute to the life
and services of Dr.
Williamson as a man and physician. The active
pallbearers were Earl
Foulds, Harry Galloway, T. O. Whitaker, W. H. Smith,
F. H. Hammond and O.
A. Riggs. Honorary pallbearers were C.
V. Percy, Paul Sheridan and W.
Lee Yarborough. The flower girls were Mrs.
Tom O’Donnell, Mrs. Matt Zimmerman and Mrs.
Guy Zimmerman. Interment was in the Odd
Fellows’ Cemetery.
Dr. Williamson was born
near Athens,
Texas on June 9th, 1878; died August 24th, 1944. On
March 17th, 1904 he
was united in marriage to Miss Addie Finklea, who
survives him. He is
also survived by four children, J. K. Williamson of
burnet, Miss Marie
Williamson of Burnet, L. A. Williamson of San Angelo,
Mrs. T. A.
Loveless of Globe, Arizona, one sister, Mrs. Ira
Burnett of Canton,
Texas, a brother, J. C. Williamson of Dallas, and two
half sisters,
Mrs. Theo. Walker and Mrs. Ted Simmons of Athens.
Relatives from a
distance who attended the funeral were: Mrs.
W. F. Williamson of Dallas, Mrs.
J. M. Ralston of Gainsville, Mrs.
P. H. Smith of Houston, Mr.
and Mrs. T. P. Finklea of Houston, Mrs.
Albert Scott of Llano, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Burnett of Canton, Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. Burnett of Tyler, Mrs.
Ira Burnett of Canton, Mrs.
Ted Simmons of Trinidad, Mrs.
Thos. Walker of Athens, J.
C. Williamson of Dallas, Mrs.
Nellie Mae Brown of San Antonio, Walter
and Ted Spurlin of San Antonio, Mrs.
John Cauncy
of Lubbock, Mrs. And
Mrs. Rheindardt of Austin, and Mr.
Milton Rheindardt of Austin.
Dr.
Williamson moved to Burnet about 30 years ago, and had
been
constantly engaged in the practice of medicine in this
section since
that time. He soon established himself as a physician
of superior
ability and built up a very large and lucrative
practice, extending
into many sections of Burnet county. He had been
overworked before the
war started, but since that time, after so many of the
doctors had gone
into the armed services, he performed double
duty, which was too
much for a man of his age. His family and friends for
months had urged
him to curtail some of his work, but he considered it
his duty to the
public to remain on his feet. This writer thinks Dr.
Williamson was a
casualty of the war just the same as men who have
fallen on the battle
fields. He was deeply concerned about the war and
perhaps was the
heaviest investor in war bonds of any person in Burnet
county. Any
movement calculated to help the war and relieve the
arduous duties of
those engaged in actual hostilities, always received
his hearty and
active support financially and otherwise. Like Dayton
Moses, he prayed
that he might live to see the end of the horrible
conflict, but such
was not to be.
Added to his ability as
a physician, Dr.
Williamson possessed other attributes of character
that endeared him to
many friends. He was a pleasant and entertaining
companion, a loving
father and husband, and a bulwark for the Baptist
church. Since the war
started, frequently when we would meet, Dr. Williamson
would tell the
writer he was working too steadily and to taper off a
little. When we
would reply and ask him how about himself, he would
laugh and say that
both of us would keep on as long as we could stand he
guessed.
Dr.
Williamson will be missed by many people, some of whom
have
depended upon him for more than a quarter of a century
for medical care
and advise for their families. Burnet will not seem
right without him,
but death will come to us all, sooner or later, and
all of us have to
become reconciled to the inevitable.
Mrs.
Williamson
and the sons and daughters have the profound sympathy
of the people of
their home town and adjoining communities in their
irreparable loss.
The Burnet Bulletin, Thursday, 31 Aug 1944
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