Margaret Hicks Williams
Margaret Hicks Williams was an American author and specialist in international affairs. A government official, she worked as a writer and political expert in the Military Intelligence Division, U.S. Department of War, before joining the U.S. State Department in 1944, serving in various roles. Williams was president of the Washington, D.C. Women's Commission on Crime Prevention.
Early life and education
Margaret de Forest Hicks was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, on June 30, 1899. Her parents were William Cleveland and Margaret Hicks.Williams was educated with a governess until she entered the National Cathedral School, Washington, D.C., graduating in 1918. She attended Columbia University and George Washington University.
Career
She was the only woman officially detailed to represent the War Department at the Institute of Politics, Williamstown, Massachusetts. She attended the 1921, 1922, and 1923 sessions in this capacity, participating in round-table discussions on international politics, particularly concerning the Orient. In 1944, she joined the State Department, serving as cultural attache in Tokyo and Manila.In the summer of 1924, Williams took a semi-official trip through central and southeastern Europe, including the Balkans and Turkey, making unofficial survey of conditions and interviewing heads of governments for purpose of gathering material for writing. Since 1923, she was a special feature writer for The [New York Times] and contributed to many magazines, including Current History, The International Interpreter, Aero Digest, The Century Magazine, and others. She co-authored The American Year Book, 1925, and was the author of "Nations Gather to Assist China" ; "Head of Bulgaria's Disordered House" ; "Williamstown" ; "Japan's Envoy of Good Will" ; "Scholar President Puts Austria Back on Her Feet" ; "China in Anti-Foreign Mood" ; "America's Opportunity in Siberia" ; "Is Japan Overpopulated?" ; "Measuring the Heat of the Stars" ; "New Forces in Old Japan", and other works.
Williams was the president of the Washington, D.C. Women's Commission on Crime Prevention. She was a member of the National League of American Pen Women, National [Press Club (United States)|National Women's Press Club], Junior League, and St. John's Episcopal Church.
Personal life
She was a resident of New York City and Cumberland, Maryland, before removing to Washington, D.C..A bibliophile, her hobby was book collecting.
She and her husband, James Bradley Williams, were divorced in the 1940s.
Margaret Hicks Williams died at Suburban Hospital, Bethesda, Maryland, on August 18, 1972; interment was in Chatham, New Jersey.
Awards and honors
- 1968, Meritorious Service Award from the State Department
- 1968, Professional Woman of the Year, District Chapter, National Federation of Business and Profession Women's Clubs
Selected works
Co-author
- The American Year Book, 1925
- ''To Live in Amity - The Story of the U.S. State Department''
Articles
- "After the Earthquake in Japan"
- "America's Opportunity in Siberia"
- "A New Era in Japanese Diplomacy"
- "China in Anti-Foreign Mood"
- "Constantinople Settings and Traits"
- "Head of Bulgaria's Disordered House"
- "Is Japan Overpopulated?"
- "Japan's Envoy of Good Will"
- "Japan and Russia in the East: Stunted Seeds of a Second Russo-Japanese War"
- "Measuring the Heat of the Stars"
- "Nations Gather to Assist China"
- "New Forces in Old Japan"
- "Scholar President Puts Austria Back on Her Feet"
- "Williamstown"