Avon Williams
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Avon N. Williams, Jr. (1921 – 1993 was a Tennessee State Senator from 1972 to 1992.
Williams was born in Knoxville, Tennessee. He was a 1940 graduate of Johnson C. Smith University, an historically black university located in Charlotte, North Carolina. He subsequently studied law at the Boston University School of Law and was admitted to the Tennessee and Massachusetts bars in 1948. He practiced law in Knoxville from 1949 to 1953, when he moved to Nashville.
In Nashville, Williams was a very active member of the NAACP, long serving on its executive board, and active as a civil rights attorney and a key figure in the Nashville-area Civil Rights Movement. Additionally, he was an active alumnus of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity and served as a Reserve lieutenant colonel in the United States Army Judge Advocate General's Corps. He also was an instructor in "dental jurisprudence" in the dental department of Nashville's Meharry Medical College, one of the few historically black medical schools. Williams was extremely active in school desegregation, long serving as a plaintiff's counsel in Nashville's long-running (40 year plus) school desegregation lawsuit which resulted in forced busing, making him extremely unpopular with elements of Nashville's white community and even the subject of death threats by white supremacists.
In 1972 Williams was elected as a Democrat to the Tennessee State Senate from a newly-configured district centering on the historically-black section of North Nashville. From this base, he became even influential in the Nashville black community and perhaps for a period its most high-profile leader. He was unrelenting in his pursuit of the liberal Democratic agenda of the era in general and the civil rights agenda in particular. As a high-profile African American legislator, he was, perhaps even more than most of his peers, a lightning rod for both criticism and praise, depending upon the observer's point of view.
In the late 1980s Williams began to be debilitated by the progressive effects of ALS ("Lou Gehrig's disease") and began to require the services of a chauffeur/attendant. Speculation was rife that he would not seek another Senate term in 1988; however he did so and was easily re-elected. However, this was to prove to be his final term, as he came to realize that he was no longer capable of the physical rigors that Senate service occasionally entailed and did not seek another term in 1992, dying the following year. In honor of his unfailing devotion to the Civil Rights cause, the downtown campus of Tennessee State University (formermly the University of Tennessee at Nashville, but forced to merge, largely as a result of Williams' actions, into TSU so as to expedite integration of the state's system of higher education) has been named for him.
Williams' son Avon N. Williams III, like his father an attorney but unlike him a Republican, died in 2005.