Connect Summer 2016 | Page 11

THE WILLIAMS FAMILY LEGACY To the Williams family, serving their country was just as much a family business as pipelines. Three second-generation members of the founding family served in World War II. Charlie Williams was in the United States Army Corps of Engineers; he supervised the construction of airfields, pipelines, and roads in the China-Burma-India theater. Charlie served in various executive and board positions from 1949 until he retired in 1974. Charlie’s brother John Williams was with the Navy Civil Engineering Corps; he served in the Pacific theater, including Iwo Jima. John served as Williams CEO from 1949 to 1979 and chairman, 1971-1979. Charlie and John’s cousin David Williams, Jr., was a fighter pilot with the 8th Air Force of the Army Air Corps. He flew missions over Nazi-controlled Europe. David served in various executive and board roles from 1949 until his death in 2000. Clockwise from top, David Williams, John Williams and Charles Williams all served in the U.S. Military in World War II. “Veterans have been groomed to take an active role in achieving their objective. This is Job 1 in the United States military. We have the most effective and elite fighting force in the world because individuals are expected to reach higher and achieve greater levels of responsibility.” A good example is operations technician Kirk Edwards, who joined Williams after serving 20 years in the U.S. Air Force, retiring as a technical sergeant. Kirk’s Air Force background instilled in him the “safety first” mindset essential to working at Williams. “My mechanical background is what I believed helped me secure my job with Williams,” Edwards says. “Additionally, attention to detail and safety was always imperative when working with military aircraft. During my interview process, I was asked about how I viewed job safety. The fact that it had been drilled into my daily routine for 20 years meant that I knew it always had to come first.” Edwards believes his military training has a direct impact on Williams’ reliability in serving customers. “Our customers rely on us to deliver the energy that makes their lives move. The attention to detail is imperative to ensure that we do not interrupt the flow of natural gas, while ensuring the safety of each other and our neighbors.” Well beyond their active military service, Williams’ veterans continue to help ensure our country’s security through safe, reliable energy supplies — just as their predecessors did in building the War Emergency Pipelines all those decades ago. ■ Portions of this article reprinted by permission of Search & Employ® magazine, published by RecruitMilitary. Built by Williams Brothers during World War II, the Big Inch and Little Big Inch pipelines safely brought vital crude oil, fuel oil and gasoline from Texas to massive war plants and machines in the northeast United States. 11