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Lois Fannon

Female Abt 1926 - 2003  (~ 77 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Lois Fannon was born about 1926 in Lee County, , , Virginia; died on 17 Nov 2003 in Carter County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Happy Valley Memorial Park, , Carter County, Tennessee.

    Notes:

    Mrs. Lois Fannon Williams, 77, 709 Tipton Street, Elizabethton, died Monday, November 17, 2003 in the Sycamore Shoals Hospital.
    A native of Seminary (Lee County), Virginia, she was a daughter of the late Peter Bryant and Catherine Shuler Fannon.
    She was a 1944 graduate of Dryden High School, Dryden, Va. and attended Steed School of Business in Elizabethton. She had lived in Elizabethton since 1945.
    Mrs. Williams was a member of Oak Street Baptist Church for 57 years. She served as Sunday school secretary for 40 years until November 1, 2003. She was church secretary for 21 years until her retirement on January 28, 1990. On October 19, 2003 she received a certificate of appreciation from Oak Street for her 50 years of service as the church historian.
    She was a member of the Alpha Iota Sorority.
    Mrs. Williams was preceded in death by a son, James Edward Williams; a brother, James Fannon; two infant brothers and two infant sisters.
    Survivors include her husband of 58 years, Ray W. Williams; one son, Billy Ray Williams, Johnson City; one daughter, Kathryn Jeree Williams, of Fredericksburg, Va.; three sisters and brothers-in-law, Rebecca and Ray King, of Pineville, Ky.; Sarah and Billy Solomon, of Powell, Tenn. and Margaret and Paul Sherman, of Bedford, Va. Several nieces and nephews also survive.
    Funeral services will be conducted at 8 p.m. Tuesday, November 18, 2003 in the Oak Street Baptist Church with the Rev. Bruce Hendrich and Rev. Bob Polk officiating. Graveside services and interment will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday, November 19, 2003 in Happy Valley Memorial Park.

    Lois married Raymond W. "Ray" Williams about 1941. Raymond (son of Armstread Vaught "A. V." Williams and Sarah Elizabeth Elliott) was born on 5 Jan 1920 in Carter County, , , Tennessee; died on 25 Feb 2009 in Carter County, , , Tennessee; was buried in Happy Valley Memorial Park, , Carter County, Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Billy Ray Williams  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1947 in Carter County, , , Tennessee; died on 15 Feb 2015 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Billy Ray Williams Descendancy chart to this point (1.Lois1) was born about 1947 in Carter County, , , Tennessee; died on 15 Feb 2015 in Washintgon County, , , Tennessee.

    Notes:

    Bill R. "Billy Ray" Williams, 68, Johnson City, Tenn., died Sunday, Feb. 15, 2015, at Johnson City Medical Center after a lengthy illness.
    Mr. Williams was preceded in death by his parents, Ray W. Williams and Lois Fannon Williams, and by a brother, James, all of Elizabethton.
    He was a graduate of Elizabethton High School and attended East Tennessee State University, studying computer science. While at ETSU, Mr. Williams was a member of the National Championship ROTC Band that, in 1966, performed in Lincoln Center's Philharmonic Hall.
    Mr. Williams began his working career in the 1960s at WBEJ-AM radio in his hometown of Elizabethton, where he worked as board announcer for "Breakfast at The White House" with "Curly" White and later as station news director. He acquired the moniker "Mophead" there, and the nickname stuck when he moved to WJCW-AM in Gray, where he worked a daytime shift of news and music and hosted a night show.
    In the mid-1970s, Mr. Williams moved to television, working as cameraman, reporter and weekend anchor at WJHL-TV in Johnson City.
    Encouraged by friends and professors, in the later 1970s, Mr. Williams took a position at ETSU as a mainframe computer operator. His supervisor recognized Mr. Williams' attention to detail, his meticulous work ethic and his affinity for complex systems, and moved him from operations into systems programming in 1979. There, he worked nights, weekends and long days locked away, developing highly detailed code, first for the mainframe and then for a variety of Novell and UNIX servers related to networking and to bringing the Internet to ETSU.
    With intelligence, adaptability and an affinity for computer technology and practical problem solving, Mr. Williams made the transitions from IBM mainframes to virtual machines and MVS to Linux. From 2001 to 2011, he worked for the university libraries, administering the systems that provided the Northeast Tennessee Libraries online catalog; online publishing of ETSU theses and dissertations; and access to electronic resources. He was instrumental in moving university library services into the digital age.
    Mr. Williams retired in June 2011, after 32 years of service as a systems analyst at ETSU.
    He enjoyed numerous pursuits outside the computer center or office, including the pursuit of good food and drink, and if he could not have them, he loved to talk about them or watch Food Network. Mr. Williams enjoyed puzzles of all sorts, was a Sudoku addict and loved Rube Goldberg contraptions.
    He was also a member of Oak Street Baptist Church, Elizabethton, and of Mensa, the International High IQ Society.
    One of Mr. Williams' numerous avocations was acting in and directing local community and regional theater, at Johnson City Community Theater, Jonesborough Repertory Theater, Elizabethton High School and The Olde West dinner theater. He is remembered for so many productions, including "Lion in Winter," "Carnival," "Guys & Dolls," "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum," "Wait Until Dark" and "Good Evening" — and many priceless portrayals, including General Bull Moose in "Lil Abner" and King Sextimus in "Once Upon a Mattress."
    More than anything, though, Mr. Williams will be remembered as a stalwart friend, always ready with witticisms and wisdom, such as "I'm sure it will be one way or the other." He always will be "resplendent in his magnificence."
    Survivors include: one sister, Kathryn Williams, Virginia; an aunt; several cousins; and many friends.