An early leader in the Savannah, Georgia, historic preservation movement, as well as the main character in the Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evilbook and movie
James Arthur Williams (December 11, 1930 – January 14, 1990) was an American antiques dealer and a historic preservationist based in Savannah, Georgia. He played an active role in the preservation of the Savannah Historic District for over 35 years.
Williams is the main character in John Berendt's book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, published four years after Williams's 1990 death. After four trials for an alleged murder that occurred in his house in 1981, he was acquitted in 1989.
Williams became a noted antiques dealer after opening a shop, with his friend Jack Kieffer (1915–2007),[5] in 1953.[2] Williams also became close friends with Joe Goodman.[5]
Williams purchased the 1,800-acre (730 ha) Cabbage Island, off the Georgia coast, in 1968. He paid $5,000 for it,[7] and later sold it for $900,000.[2] With his newfound fortune, in 1969 Williams purchased Mercer House, which was originally built for General Hugh Mercer, great-grandfather of famed American songwriter Johnny Mercer. At the time of the purchase, the house had been vacant for almost a decade since its former occupants, the Shriners organization, had used the building for their Alee Temple.[8] Over two years, Williams restored the house. After the restoration, it became his residence; he ran his antiques restoration business from the basement of Mercer House, assisted by Barry Thomas (1954–1992), a native of Glasgow, Scotland.[9][10] Williams often worked late into the night and slept the first part of the next day.[11] His antique shop was behind the house, on Whitaker Street, run by Kenneth Worthy.[2][6]
Williams held annual Christmas parties at Mercer House, on the eve of the cotillion's debutante ball, which were the highlight of many people's social calendars.[12][13] Williams had an "in" box and an "out" box for his invitations, depending on whether or not the person was in Williams's favor at the time.[14][7]
Williams was arrested on May 2, 1981, for the alleged murder of 21-year-old Danny Hansford, with whom he had been having a homosexual relationship,[2] at Mercer House.[8] At his arraignment his bond was set at $25,000, which he posted.[8]
After the subsequent four trials (the first three in Savannah; the final one in Augusta),[17] a record in the state of Georgia,[18] Williams was acquitted in May 1989, eight years after his arrest.
Death
On January 14, 1990, eight months after his acquittal, Williams died unexpectedly in his home, at age 59, from pneumonia and heart failure.[19] He was discovered by Doug Seyle, one of Williams' employees, who let himself in after receiving no response at the front door.[20]Sonny Seiler, Williams's attorney, said he found Williams in the doorway between the office and the hallway: "I went immediately to Mercer House and found Jim on the floor. I thought he was probably dead. He was in his skivvies.”[19]
Williams is buried next to his mother, who survived him by seven years, in Ramah Church Cemetery, Gordon, Georgia.[21] Williams's father, who died six years before him, is buried in Danville, Georgia.
Williams' sister, Dorothy Kingery, inherited Mercer House and put it up for sale later that decade, with a price tag of just under $9,000,000. This was later reduced to about $7,000,000.[23] Kingery died in 2023, aged 88.[24] Her daughter and Williams' niece, Dorothy Susan Kingery, now owns the house.[25]
In popular culture
The book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, about Hansford's alleged murder and Williams' subsequent trial for the killing, was written by author John Berendt and published in 1994. A New York Times Bestseller and finalist for the 1995 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction, the book was adapted into a movie directed by Hollywood veteran Clint Eastwood in 1997. "Kevin Spacey played Jim Williams -- badly," Berendt said in a 2015 interview. "He didn't even come close. I had offered [Spacey] recordings so he could to listen to Jim Williams talking to me, regaling me with stories while sitting in his living room in Mercer House. [Spacey] said he'd already heard Williams on tape talking during one of his trials. But when I saw the movie, I was perplexed by the way Spacey portrayed Williams, because he did it as if he were asleep. He talked as if he were in a fog or sleepwalking. Then I realized what had happened, and I thought it was hilariously funny." Berendt believes Spacey listened to tapes of Williams during the third trial, when he had taken Valium.[26]
Jim Williams' confession to John Berendt before the third trial was recorded on a Dictaphone by the author. "If [Williams] had not died, I don't know what I would have done, because I'm pretty sure he would not have wanted that in the book."[27]
"I was fascinated by Jim, by what a brilliant and engaging storyteller he was," said Berendt in 2015. "He was bitter, funny, with that ironic humor so distinctive to Savannah."[28]
^ abcKingery, Dorothy (1999). More Than Mercer House: Savannah's Jim Williams & His Southern Houses. Savannah, Georgia: Sheldon Group, LLC. ISBN0-9672187-0-5.
^Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Location 19770). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.