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Ramon Oscar Williams

Ramon Oscar Williams

Male 1827 - 1913  (85 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Ramon Oscar WilliamsRamon Oscar Williams was born on 4 Dec 1827 in Arlington, District of Columbia (son of George Washington Williams and Janett Ann Young); died on 2 Oct 1913 in Brooklyn, New York; was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.

    Other Events:

    • Census: 8 Jun 1880, Brooklyn, New York
    • Census: 6 Jun 1900, Brooklyn, New York
    • Census: 18 Apr 1910, Brooklyn, New York

    Notes:

    Biography:
    The following was included in "New York State's Prominent and Progressive Men," Compiled by Mitchell C. Harrison in 1900 and published by the New York Tribune.
    The chapter entitled Ramon O. Williams is from Volume II, pages 377-380.

    RAMON O. WILLIAMS
    Ramon O. Williams was born in Washington, D. C. about seventy years ago. His father was George Williams and his mother Jeanette Anne Young, natives of Washington, and of Colonial and English ancestry.
    When a mere child, he was sent to Cuba with his father, who was to leave him with an aunt born in Maryland, and married to a Spanish merchant established at Havana. She, having no children, wished to adopt her little nephew, who at her request had been named after her husband as her son. He went to school in Havana. His mother, not wishing to part forever with her son, after a time requested his return to her, which was done. Then he went to school in Alexandria, Virginia, and in Washington. His father having died early, he was taken from school at the age of 12 years and placed to work in the office of Blair and Rives, editors and proprietors of "The Globe." Some time after, he went to the office of the "Madisonian." This paper was the organ of the John Tyler Administration. At the age of eighteen Mr. Williams returned to Havana, where he completed his education under private instruction, since which time he has been continually connected with the commerce of that island with the United States.
    In the year 1856 he was sought by some of his fellow-countrymen, residents of New London and Mystic, Connecticut, to represent them in defense of a proposition they wished to present to the Captain-General of Cuba for the free introduction of live fish from the west coast of Florida into Havana. Prior to the transfer of Florida in 1821, under the treaty of 1819, the West coast of Florida had served as the fishing grounds for the market of Havana. By reason of this treaty, these Florida fishing-grounds and the market of Havana had become foreign to each other; and the legislation of Spain reserved the catching and supplying of fresh fish to the retired sailors of the King's Navy; therefore, the Spanish law prohibited the trade. But the law was evaded, and the trade carried on in American smacks, that fished on the West coast of Florida under the American flag, and brought their catches into the port of Havana under the Spanish flag. That is, each of those smacks carried both flags. The famous Don Francisco Marti had the monopoly of supplying fresh fish to Havana. He made an immense fortune out of this business, while the American fishermen scarcely made a living. It was because of this inequality of conditions that Mr. Williams was sought by the fishermen to represent them before General Concha, then Captain-General of the Island. After several months Mr. Williams succeeded against the millionaire Mr. Marti, and fresh fish was supplied to the people of Havana, under the American flag, at from eight to ten cents per pound, whereas under the monopoly of Mr. Marti they had to pay twenty-five cents and upwards per pound. The result was, the people of Havana got cheaper fish and the American fishermen got better returns for their labor. In this contest against Mr. Marti, Mr. Williams gained his first insight into the economics of Cuba, which subject became a favorite study with him ever afterward.
    In 1868, on learning of the tender of the annexation of the Republic of Santo Domingo to the United States, by General Baez, he instantly saw, being then engaged in sugar-planting, the disintegrating effect on monarchy and African slavery in Cuba if that proposition was carried out, would have on the Cuban problem, because of the economic dependence of the island on the sugar market of the United States, which dependence had been recently wrought by the cyclic events of the destruction of the Louisiana sugar crop, during our Civil War. At the request of the late John E. Develin of New York, he made a sketch of his views, which was read and approved by several Americans of high intellectual standing.
    Mr. Williams withdrew from business in 1874, and took up his residence in New York.
    In the same year of 1874, at the solicitation of the late Thurlow Weed of New York, he showed, for Frederick W. Seward, how the negotiation of reciprocity treaties with other sugar countries than Cuba would effectively solve the Cuban problem without war, and by the mere effect of economic force. A copy of this sketch later fell into the hands of the late Charles A. Dana, who headed it with the title of "Some Considerations on the Absurd Commercial Relations between Spain and the United States," and published it in a daily issue of the "Sun," in January, 1876.
    Shortly after his return to the United States in 1874, he was requested to go back to Havana to take charge of the United States consulate-general, during General Grant's administration, for three or four months, which he accepted. He soon afterwards received the honorary appointment of vice-consul-general. At the end of ten years he resigned this position. In 1884 he was appointed by President Arthur to be United States consul-general at Havana, and was continued during the successive administrations of Presidents Cleveland and Harrison.
    In 1890 he was called to Washington by order of Secretary Blaine to assist in supporting the proposed amendment of the McKinley Tariff Bill of that year. To this end he went before Senators Allison, Aldrich, Hiscoch, and Jones, the majority members of the Senate committee then having the subject under consideration, and before Representatives Burroughs, Gear, and Hitt of the corresponding House committee, to whom he expressed his view in favor of the proposition which afterward took form under the Aldrich Amendment.
    On the breaking out of the Cuban insurrection in 1895, Mr. Williams had to defend, under the treaties between the two governments, many Cubans who had obtained naturalization papers in the United States and had taken part in the insurrection, and having, in consequence, been considered persona non grata by the Captain-General of Cuba (Callejas), and the Madrid government, and also for reasons of self-respect he obtained leave of absence to go to Washington, where he signified his intention to President Cleveland to resign at once. But he returned to Havana, at the request of the President, for a short time, intending to forward his resignation from there. However, with the precedents in his memory of the fate of the Critteden men in Havana in 1851, and the public execution of their leader, General Narciso Lopez, of which act Mr. Williams had been a near-by witness, and of the Virginius men at Santiago in 1873, and from his desire to serve the cause of international peace, knowing that the foundation of Spanish power in Cuba was essentially economic, and fast exhausting itself from the violation of the natural economic law, as defined by Isaiah, in arithmetical ratio, the key to all the physical sciences, in his warning to the merchant princess of Tyre (chapter xxiv., verses 1, 2, 3), he remained in Havana a year longer, attending to the many cases of the Cubans with United States naturalization papers. As soon as, in his judgment, a sufficient number of these cases had been settled for the formation of an adequate jurisprudence under the treaties, he then sent his formal and irrevocable resignation to the President. In the full faith of the sufficiency of article 7 of the treaty of 1795, between the United States and Spain, and the protocol of January 12, 1877, negotiated at Madrid by the late Caleb Cushing, Mr. Williams rejected the pressure brought upon him to ask the government at Washington to station a vessel of war in the harbor of Havana, fully believing in his ability to defend and to obtain all the stipulated rights of American citizens without any such aid, having, besides, reasons to suspect that the calling of a man-of-war might become a doubtful expedient.
    His last important official act was the defense of the men of the Competitor expedition, which vessel had been captured with officers and crew while landing arms and recruits for the insurgents in the province of Pinar del Rio on the north coast of Cuba. For his action in this matter he was highly complemented by the Department of State.
    Reasoning from the fundamental principles of economics, Mr. Williams frequently pointed out in his consular reports, yet unpublished, the disasters that awaited Spanish power in Cuba.

    He lived for a few years with his aunt in Cuba as a child after which he returned home. He worked for newspaper editors at the age of 12 to help support his family after his father died. In 1847 at the age of 19 he returned to Cuba and finished his education. He was very fond of both Spaniards and Cubans. In Cuba he was successful in many business ventures from import/export to sugar planter. He was in the shipping business between Baltimore and Havana. He retired from business in 1874 and moved to 35 Cambridge Place in Brooklyn, NY (although he was not listed in the annual Brooklyn City Dir until the 1879/80 edition). In 1871, he was appointed Vice Consul to Cuba by President Ulysses S Grant, a personal friend. He resigned after 10 years. In 1884 he was appointed Consul General by President Warren G Harding receiving a salary of $6,000 per year, the largest of salary of any consul general (according to a newspaper, probably the Brooklyn Daily Eagle). He resigned in 1896 after serving under three administrations. The 1880, 1900, and 1910 censuses listed him as a sugar merchant, a banker, and own income respectively. All three censuses list his home as 35 Cambridge Pl, Brooklyn and the last listed it as being owned with no mortgage. The house was an old brownstone. In 1880 his son Ramon was at college and all other children were at school. The other residents in 1900 were Angela G Williams (wife), M Angelina Disbrow (daughter), William J Disbrow (son in-law), George A Williams (son), Alice A Williams (daughter in-law), Ramon O Williams (grandson), Robert A Williams (son), Annie J Welsh (servant), and Marie McMaster (servant). In 1910 they were the same people except William Disbrow was not there and Jane A and Angela L Williams (granddaughters) were there. There was one servant and his name was Ernist Miller. On his fiftieth wedding anniversary he received the following letter from the manager of the Spanish department of a New York mercantile house: "When I consider all the good you did for the Cubans during the Revolution and when you were acting as consul-general or minister of your country, I feel very proud of your friendship and grateful in every respect for the victims you saved from the ferocity of Spaniards and their government. I do sincerely hope that all your Cuban friends think as I do toward you, and also that they will appreciate your best and glorious deeds."

    On 5 January, 1866, Ramon left Charleston, South Carolina for Havana on the steamship Isabella along with Mrs. Underwood (likely his godmother) according to a notice in the Charleston Courier.
    As of 1871, the Book "Cuba With Pen and Pencil", Samuel Hazard, said that R. O. Williams line of 26 Mercaderas St., Havana ran fairs from Baltimore for $50.
    According to the "Brooklyn Daily Eagle Almanac", 1891, Ramon along with the Consul Generals of London, Paris and Rio de Janero were the highest paid Consul Generals at $6,000 per year.
    According to Willis Johnson in "The History of Cuba, Volume 4", 1920, Ramon strongly recommended against sending a ship to Havana prior to the Spanish American War:
    It is to be recalled that Ramon O. Williams, who had only a little while before retired from the office of American Consul-General at Havana, and was particularly well informed and judicious, earnestly warned the United States government against sending a ship to Havana, because the harbor was very elaborately mined, and there was a bitter and truculent feeling among the Spaniards against the United States; wherefore the danger of some untoward occurrence was too great to be incurred without a more pressing necessity than was apparent. But despite his warning the Maine was sent. She was conducted by a Spanish official pilot to her anchorage .at a buoy between RegIa and the old custom house. Whether a mine was attached to that buoy or not is unknown, though Mr. Williams was confident that one was. His theory was that some malignant Spanish officer, who had access to the keyboard of the mines, perhaps through connivance with some other fanatic, watched to see the tide swing the ship directly over the mine and then touched the key and caused the explosion. That would account for the enormous hole which was blown in the side of the ship, and which could not have been caused by any little mine or torpedo which might have been floated to the side of the ship, but must have been produced by a very large mine planted deep beneath the hull.

    Census:
    Head, 35 Cambridge Place.

    Census:
    Head, 35 Cambridge Place.

    Census:
    Head, 35 Cambridge Place.

    Buried:
    Lot 24465, Section 139

    Ramon married Angela Luciana García about 1861 in Havana, Cuba. Angela (daughter of Vicente Benito García and Ana Coleta García) was born on 7 Jan 1836 in Regla, Yela, Cuba; died on 9 Aug 1920 in Brooklyn, New York; was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery, Lot 24465 Sec 139, Brooklyn, New York. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Ramon V Williams was born on 8 Oct 1862 in Havana, Cuba; died on 1 Mar 1933.
    2. Angelina 'Lena' Williams was born on 21 May 1864 in Cuba; died on 14 Mar 1944; was buried on 16 Mar 1944 in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.
    3. Lucia Ysabel Williams was born on 8 Jul 1865 in Cuba; died on 23 Aug 1883 in Asbury Park, New Jersey; was buried on 23 Aug 1883 in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.
    4. Jeannette F. Williams was born on 26 May 1867; died on 8 Oct 1869 in Havana, Cuba; was buried on 27 Mar 1885 in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.
    5. George Washington Aurelio Williams was born on 2 Dec 1872 in Havana, Cuba; died on 2 Nov 1938 in 57 Pondfield Road West, Bronxville, New York; was buried on 9 Nov 1938 in Green-Wood Cemetery, Lot 24465 Sec 139, Brooklyn, New York.
    6. Robert Alfred Williams was born on 2 Aug 1875 in Havana, Cuba; died on 23 Feb 1928 in 1335 East 28th Street, Brooklyn, New York; was buried on 25 Feb 1928 in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George Washington WilliamsGeorge Washington Williams was born in 1802 in Washington City, District of Columbia; died on 1 Aug 1836 in Washington City, District of Columbia; was buried in Sep 1836 in Congressional Cemetery, Washington, District of Columbia.

    Notes:

    Buried:
    Headstone says:
    In Memory of
    GEORGE WASHINGTON WILLIAMS
    Born in Washington City
    in 1802 where he died
    August 1, 1836
    Aged 34
    Erected by his son
    RAMON WILLIAMS
    1874

    George married Janett Ann Young on 29 Jun 1826 in Washington, District of Columbia. Janett was born in in Washington, District of Columbia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Janett Ann Young was born in in Washington, District of Columbia.

    Other Events:

    • Name: Janett Ann Williams

    Notes:

    Biography:
    The 1880 and 1910 censuses for her son Ramon list her birth place as Washington, DC and the 1900 census lists it as Virginia. This could be because Arlington, VA was part of Washington, DC at the time of her birth and not at the time of the censuses. Her son Ramon once said that she had a large and well known family in Washington and a great many of them are buried in one the old cemeteries near Washington.

    Children:
    1. 1. Ramon Oscar Williams was born on 4 Dec 1827 in Arlington, District of Columbia; died on 2 Oct 1913 in Brooklyn, New York; was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.
    2. J R Williams was born between 1827 and 1836.