Williams, Corliss Gayle Johnson (1934-2023)
Dates
- Existence: 1934 - 2023
Biography
Corliss Gayle Johnson Williams was born on May 4, 1934 to Reba H. Johnson and Clarence J. Johnson of Iola, Kansas. Clarence Johnson was an environmental engineer for the city of Chanute, Kansas, where Corliss graduated from Chanute High School in 1952. She matriculated at Wichita State University and attended for two years before marrying her high school sweetheart, Marion Edward Williams.
The couple moved to Des Moines, where Marion Williams established a pharmacy in the heart of the Des Moines black business district on Center Street. During this period, Corliss Williams worked at the Preferred Risk Mutual Insurance Company. She then enrolled at Drake University and graduated with honors in Education in 1966. She became a teacher of English literaturue at East and Hoover high schools, and later a vice principal at Amos Hiatt Middle School in Des Moines, as well as an administrator at Des Moines University. Corliss and Marion had two children, Mark E. Williams and the Rev. Julie Johnson Staples, J.D.
Corliss Williams was an active member of the Des Moines chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and co-chaired the Iowa delegation to the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. Williams and future Iowa legislator A. June Franklin, in collaboration with the American Friends Service, worked together to mobilize activists across Iowa to travel to Washington, D.C. to attend the march. Williams wrote letters to the Des Moines Register publicizing the march, defending political protest, and calling on Iowa churches to pray for a peaceful and effective march. Williams traveled to D.C. herself along with about 40 other Iowans who participated in the march. While there, she met with the Iowan congressional delegation as an advocate.
Williams was also active in various community programs, particularly those focused on education and housing, Democratic politics, and women's clubs in the Des Moines area. For example, she worked to build interracial and interfaith unity through her engagement with the Sisterhood at Temple B'Nai Jeshurun. She was also a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.
Corliss Williams passed away on February 8, 2023.
Found in 1 Collection or Record:
Corliss Williams papers
Des Moines civil rights activist, organizer, and teacher who co-chaired the Iowa delegation to the March on Washington in 1963.