FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 4): Houston, Tx. – Packages holding the dismembered bodies of two small boys were unearthed last night by a 19-year-old youth.
Police say the bodies are those of the 9 and 8-year-old sons
of Mrs. Ann Williams, 28-year-old 10-cent store clerk of suburban Pasadena, who
had been missing six days.
~ Help Offered. ~
Clayton Johnson Jr. said Mrs. Williams, a friend of the
Johnson family had asked permission, to dump packages of spoiled venison behind
his father’s garage. He volunteered to bury them.
Johnson said he returned about nine hours later with a
friend dug up the packages after learning that Mrs. Williams and the boys had
been missing since last Thursday.
Galveston County Deputy Sheriff Curt Monceaux told the
Galveston Daily News he planned to file double charges of murder against Mrs.
Williams.
~ Murder charged. ~
Justice of the Peace A. M. Hickey returned a verdict of
murder in the death of each of the boys./ he said they had been dead three or
four days.
Mrs. Williams, a slim, quiet-mannered brunette, has been
living at a Pasadena tourist court in suburban Houston with the two boys,
Calvin, 9 and Conrad, 8.
Pasadena police said the boys’ father Hoyt J. Williams in
serving a three-year sentence in federal prison in Atlanta, Ga., for interstate
transportation of a stolen automobile.
[“Houston Mother Charged in Killings – Dismembered Bodies Of
Two Boys Found,” syndicated (AP), The Southeast Missourian (Cape Girardeau,
Mo.), Feb. 23, 1955, p. 9]
FULL TEXT (Article 2 of 4): Houston, Tx. – a red-haired
mother who strangled, dismembered and helped bury the bodies of her two small
sons, is “absolutely insane,” a psychiatrist said today.
Mrs. Ann Williams, 28, “realizes her guilt and expects to be
punished,” said Dr. C. A. Dwyer.
He indicated that Mrs. Williams who made an abortive attempt
to kill herself with sleeping pills on the same night she killed her sons, was
“running from reality.”
He described her as “above average intelligence … she has
poise and bearing.”
Mrs. Williams says she had no accomplice in the slayings.
She explained her reason for trying to take her life and the
lives of her sons, Calvin, 9, and Conrad, 8, Feb. 17.
“I didn’t want them to live in poverty like me when I was a
child.”
Investigators say a bank book found in her apartment showed
she had $1,000 in a Pasadena, Tex., bank.
Mrs. Williams was arrested early yesterday, after a young friend revealed he had
unwittingly buried the youngsters’ bodies.
[“Mother Sane, Despite Acts,” syndicated (AP), Prescott
Evening Courier (Az.), Feb. 24, 1955, p. 2]
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FULL TEXT (Article 3 of 4): Houston, Tx., Feb. 23 – Slight Mrs. Ann Williams
today calmly related how she slew her two young ones, kept their dismembered
bodies nearly a week and had them buried as “spoiled venison.”
“I’m ill and my husband’s in prison. I couldn’t take care of
them. That’s why I killed my boys, she said.”
The attractive brunette, 28, was known here as a quiet,
well-mannered person.
~ Gun Battle Veteran ~
But the FBI knows her as Annie Laurie Hazel Williams, who
took about 50 shots at FBI agents and state police near Smithville, Tenn., as
officers sought to arrest her husband as an armed deserter.
The shooting occurred Aug. 10, 1946. No disposition of the
shooting or desertion charges is noted in FBI files here.
She was arrested about 4 p. m. today after officers kicked
in her front door. She was traced through an automobile she purchased Monday.
The boys were Conrad, 8, and Calvin, 9.
~ Packages Buried ~
Clayton A. Johnson, 19, son of an Algoa Tex., garage owner,
yesterday buried four packages which Mrs. Williams told him were spoiled
venison. But he became suspicious when he learned she and her two sons had been
missing six days. He dug up the packages.
Mrs. Williams, at first denying slaying her sons, broke down
after four hours of questioning and told this story:
She gave the boys big sleeping pills “I bought in Mexico.”
She moved the bodies at night from their trailer home to An apartment she had
rented.
~ Put in Bath Tub
“I put the bodies in a bathtub and left them there two or
three days, I don’t know exactly. I took a single edged razor blade and
dismembered the bodies.”
She wrapped the bodies neatly in four packages and took them
to Algoa in adjoining Galveston County yesterday and asked if she could dump
then behind the Johnson garage. The younger Johnson buried them for her.
Mrs. Williams said she is a native of Hammond, Ind. Her husband,
Ind. Her husband, Hoyt J. Williams, 33, was sentenced to January to three years
on federal car theft charges. They had been married ten years.
~ Murder Charge Filed ~
Murder charges were filed against Mrs. Williams today.
Another clerk at the dime store started the search which
was climaxed in the predawn hours today.
Mrs. Marie Grimes reported to officers that her friend had
been missing since last Thursday.
A week earlier said Mrs. Grimes, her friend had given her a
sealed envelope with a request to open it “if anything happens to me.”
Mrs. Grimes said the letter held a blank check signed by
Mrs. Williams and instructions to take care of the boys until their grandmother
arrived. It also contained keys to Mrs. Williams’ 1950 Cadillac. In the meantime,
she purchased another car, which led to her location and arrest today.
Her grandmother lives at Mendota, Ill.
[“Texas Veteran Of Gun Battle With FBI Calmly Describes
Murder Of Her 2 Sons,” The Montgomery Advertiser (Al.), Feb. 24, 1955, p. 1]
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FULL TEXT (Article 4 of 4): Houston – Pretty Ann Williams, who says she
strangled her two young sons and then dismembered their bodies, hopes to end
her troubles in the electric chair, she told police.
Should the attractive redhead be executed she would be the
first woman to die in Texas’ lethal chair.
“I wish they’s electrocute me and get it over with,” she
told Dr. C. A. Dwayer, Harris county psychiatrist Thursday.
Dwyer said two examinations had convinced him the Pasadena,
Tex., dime store clerk is “absolutely sane” although “running from reality.”
“She has poise and bearing,” he said, “ … above average
intelligence.”
The bodies of her two sons – Calvin, 9, and Conrad, 8 – were
found Tuesday night in a shallow grave near Algoa, Tex., in adjoining Galveston
county. A young friend of Mrs. Williams unwittingly buried the bodies after she
told him the four bundles contained spoined venison.
At present the woman faces four murder charges, two here in
Harris county, where she says she killed the boys, and two in Galveston county,
where the bodies were found. Prosecutors decided Thursday night, however, that
Galveston county would handle the case.
[“Mother Who Slew 2 Sons Wants to Die,” The
Casper-Tribune-Herald (Casper, Wy.), Feb. 27, 1955, p. 3]
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I live with Ann Williams when she lived at my best friend's center about 20 years ago. I knew about her crime at that time. She was well-mannered, sweet, very, very intelligent and engaging. I never could understand how such a sweet person could be capable of a crime of that caliber. Of course she was in her late 70s when she was in the center and I was able to put aside her crime because it was so long ago. These pictures bring the whole thing to the surface. She must've snapped one day. That's the only thing I can think of. I'm sure she's gone by now. My friend and I had to have her put in a nursing home because she was showing signs of dementia. This article says she was 1st arrested in 1955 and back then she was 28, so she would be in her 90s now.
ReplyDeleteWhat does "snapped" mean? It is a common expression, but seems to describe nothing, to explain nothing. It is a term much more popular in referring to female murderers than male murderers.
ReplyDeleteSnapped...meaning being under stree causing her to do something crazy. The woman I knew didn't seem capable of such a crime. Of course when I met her she was in her 70s. Maybe something was going on in her world that cUsed her to flip. It still completely blows my mind!!! I think someone must have helped her commit this crime because those kids were not little babies and this woman was tiny.
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