Keith Phillips Williams

UntitledKeith Phillips Williams was born in Portsmouth, Ohio, on April 10th, 1927 and died at age 89 on July 5th, 2016 in Kirkwood, Missouri, of cancer. He was surrounded with love from his family and friends who are saddened by his passing. For over 60 years he was married to Phebe Ann Elsworth Williams and he had three sons and seven grandchildren. He was the son of Paul Grant Williams and Mabel Maxine Phillips Williams both from Portsmouth. He had two older brothers, Paul Grant Williams, Jr, (deceased) of Bonne Terre, Missouri, and William Grant Williams II of Ladue, Missouri. A one of a kind individual, Keith was very dynamic with a zest for life and smile for all.

In Portsmouth, Keith’s family led the Williams Manufacturing Company that specialized in producing women’s shoes. This business took the family to several places, including Bronxville, New York, while he was young. While there, he contracted polio that affected his legs, and was immobilized in bed with sand bags for weeks. For entertainment, his father tied a live chicken to his bedpost. Miraculously, he recovered. At the age of nine, the shoe business brought his family to St. Louis and they settled in the Fair Oaks neighborhood in Ladue. He later attended John Burroughs School where he enjoyed playing football and was honored to participate as Joseph in the annual Christmas Pageant. During his boyhood summers, his family spent time in Petoskey, Michigan, where he enjoyed Lake Michigan and local blue berries.

As a young man, Keith enlisted in the US Navy near the end of WWII and was a lifelong patriot. After the war, Keith had a great experience at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, where he joined the Beta Theta Pi fraternity and witnessed Sir Winston Churchill give the Iron Curtain Speech in 1946. He continued his education at Princeton University and was in the class of 1951. His three sons were all Beta’s at Westminster, and he enjoyed returning to the campus. Some of his early hobbies included photography, golf, playing the ukulele, driving big cars and getting his pilot’s license. Embracing adventure, he flew an Aeronca Champ, once narrowly escaping a crash landing.

In 1951, a beautiful young woman from Connecticut came to visit her Vassar College roommate who lived next door to the Williams family in Fair Oaks. During her short visit to St. Louis, Keith volunteered to take her out to Gaslight Square. Quickly enamored with each other, they fell in love! The long-distance courtship culminated when Keith and Phebe were married on October 8, 1955. The elegant ceremony was performed in the chapel at Rosemary Hall in Greenwich. It was officiated by Phebe’s uncle, The Reverend Clarence R. Wagner and assisted by Dr. Robert B. Appleyard, rector of Christ Episcopal Church in Greenwich. Their wedding trip was to Bermuda, and the return flight went through a very perilous, cyclonic storm! Their plane was the only one that landed at LaGuardia Airport that day, and the newly married couple was happy to be home safely to start their life-long journey together.

Securing a southeastern traveling sales position with Brown Shoe Company, Keith settled in Aiken, South Carolina. The young family soon grew with sons Kip and Ned arriving. Keith and his family enjoyed trips to nearby Hitchcock Woods, Hunting Island and Augusta to watch the Masters Golf Tournament as a member of “Arnie’s Army.” Deeply Republican and interested in politics, Keith once was persuaded to run for congress in a very heavily democratic South Carolina. He lost that election but continued to fight for republican candidates the rest of his life.

Ten years passed before an entrepreneurial opportunity enticed him back to Missouri early in 1964. Keith founded Good Earth Tools with his brother Paul’s help in a small garage adjacent to the original US Tool Grinding building in Desloge, Missouri. After some start up challenges, his young business began manufacturing carbide percussion drill bits for the hard-rock underground mines located nearby. Resourceful and determined, he found success hand-making these parts and delivering them to customers in his VW Beatle. Calling on customers in many states, sales remained deeply embedded in his character for the rest of his life, earning him the nickname of Keith “Sell-Something” Williams.

With two young sons and a new business, Keith and Phebe purchased the former WPA built John J. Rowe School House in Kirkwood’s beautiful Sugar Creek Valley. The “Ballas Palace” has been the family home since 1964. Keith had a green thumb and planted climbing roses, yew bushes and forsythia in the front yard and beefsteak tomatoes in the back. Around the house, Keith loved his pets, including dogs, ducks, chickens, guinea pigs, a raccoon and a crow.

In 1968, the family out grew the VW as son Jon was born in Kirkwood, adding to their busy lives. With three active boys, Keith enjoyed coaching Khoury League Baseball and Kirkwood Junior Football, Big River float trips, Boy Scout camping and cookouts, and things with motors. All his life, Keith was particularly interested in computers and electronics, CB’s, ham radios, ship to shore communications, police scanners, and entrepreneurial ideas, frequently combining them in his creative ventures. He remained a member of the Kirkwood community for the rest of his life and enjoyed contributing to Mudd’s Grove, the museum home for the Kirkwood Historical Society.

One of his favorite places to visit was Colorado where he loved to go skiing, hiking and camping. He enjoyed hot tubs, cocktails, wine, O’Connell’s Pub and St. Louis Blues Hockey. He also valued the solitude at Keith’s Castle, his small cabin overlooking the Meramec River in St. Clair, Missouri. Keith, Phebe and their boys enjoyed many summers at their beach cottage on “The Strand” nestled near the shores of Long Island Sound in Waterford, Connecticut.

Fifty-two years after founding Good Earth Tools, it has grown to over 160 employees, hundreds of customers, and sales in many countries. He was very appreciative and proud of the many employees and people who helped him along the way. From 1982 to 2006, he was a director of Escalade Incorporated, the successor of Williams Manufacturing Company. He was a long time member of the Commerce Bank Business Advisory board. The entrepreneurial spirit was with him the rest of his long life.

After he retired, Keith’s hobbies focused on his family heritage, particularly his Welsh ancestry, photography, computers, Internet research, political chat rooms, and email communications with many people. For a number of years he authored K-Mail, which was a provocative email communication in the Kirkwood community with thousands of subscribers. Genealogy research was his passion, and he wrote, printed and bound a number of fascinating books on family history. He would teach genealogy research and traced many a family’s roots back to the 1600’s.

Although he never ran for office again, he encouraged everyone to vote Republican and always thought taxes were too high! “Vote early and often!” was his call to all who would listen and discuss politics with him. Keith had many sayings, and often would call out “Shall we press on”, “It’s the berries”, or “I will take care of it!” Most certainly, “Sell something” was his favorite line.

Keith called his life a “great journey” and wanted to express his love and devotion to Phebe and his family. His wish was to “keep the family together!” He worked hard to make that happen and instilled that strong belief in his sons and grandchildren.

Keith is survived by his wife, Phebe Ann Elsworth Williams, and three sons – Keith [Kip] Phillips Williams, Jr., (wife Julie Ann Jones, and daughter Anne Maren Williams) – Edward [Ned] Elsworth Williams (wife Constance [Connie] Rowland Bishop and sons Edward [Teddy] Elsworth Williams Jr, Elliott Bishop Williams, and Ian Rowland Williams) – Jonathan [Jon] Gaston Williams (wife Sharon Lynn Meyers, daughter Jennifer Meyers Williams and sons Jonathan [Jack] Gaston Williams Jr, and Tyler Wilson Williams

Cremation and no service was his wish. Interment will be private. Donations to The Keith Williams Memorial Fund can be made at www.marenfund.org or mailed to – The Maren Fund, Inc., 329 Way Ave, St. Louis, MO 63122. The charity provides educational programs and services to families with Down syndrome children in the St. Louis area.

1 Comments

  1. Jeff Burke on July 22, 2016 at 11:23 am

    Sorry to hear of Keith’s passing. He was an energetic, fun person to be around.



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