I did not start where most people expect a story like this to begin. I started in a mill-town world where opportunity was uncertain—but faith, family, and hard work were not.
Donald Williams was born and raised in York County, South Carolina, in a large family of cotton mill workers. His parents, like generations before them, worked as lintheads in the mills, and he grew up surrounded by more than eighty first cousins and over forty aunts and uncles. It was a close-knit Southern family where money was often scarce, but love, laughter, and hard work were never in short supply.
Determined to change the direction of his family’s future while never forgetting where he came from, Williams became the first in his family to graduate from a major university. He went on to earn three degrees from Clemson University, including a Doctor of Education. Over the course of his career, he has taught more than 5,000 students at the secondary, undergraduate, and graduate levels.
Williams later served for fourteen years with the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA), working as an Education Research Analyst in South Korea, Japan, and the United States. His work focused on school improvement, leadership development, and helping educational systems use data to make better decisions for students and teachers.
At the center of his life are his Christian faith, his family, and his belief that education and discipline can change the course of a family for generations. He believes strongly that where a person starts in life does not have to determine where they finish. Today, both of his sons hold doctoral degrees, something that would have been almost unimaginable just a few generations earlier in his family.
As co-author of Born of Nothing: From White Trash and Lintheads to Purpose Across Generations, Williams writes not just from research, but from lived experience — telling the story of poverty, faith, education, hard work, and generational change in the American South.
I am available for podcast interviews, speaking engagements, and discussions centered on Born of Nothing, generational change, faith, education, and Southern life.
I especially value opportunities to share the deeper story behind the book and the real experiences that shaped it.