Frank
E. Williamson holds a position of prominence in the financial
circles of Delaware county as president of the Hopkinton State
Bank, which is a thoroughly reliable and progressive institution.
He also has extensive real-estate interests, owning a stock farm
of one thousand acres in this county and also land in other
states.
Mr. Williamson was born in Hopkinton on the
1st of October, 1860, a son of James T. and Helen A. (Davis)
Williamson. The father was born in Elkton, Todd county, Kentucky,
in 1834 and in 1852 came to this county with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Williamson, the family home being established in the
Plum Creek settlement. The grandfather of the subject of this
review built the first Presbyterian church at Hopkinton and was
the first elder of the same. His wife, who was in her maidenhood
Miss Sarah B. Hadden, taught school after she and her husband
arrived in this county and was one of the first teachers in
Hopkinton. On the maternal side the grandfather of Frank E.
Williamson was Edmund Davis and the grandmother was in her
maidenhood Miss Clarinda Hart, a descendant of a New York family.
Mr. Davis was one of the early justices of the peace of Hopkinton
and a man of considerable importance in the community. Seven
children were born to Mr. and Mrs. James T. Williamson, three of
whom died in infancy. The others were: Frank E.; Fines A.,
formerly a physician of Hopkinton but now practicing his
profession at Pasadena, California; Floyd D., who lives at
Hopkinton; and Fred C., deceased. The mother is still living and
is hale and hearty, although she celebrated her eightieth
birthday July 26, 1914.
Frank E. Williamson attended the public
schools and later continued his education in Lenox College. After
leaving that institution he took a course at Bayless Business
College of Dubuque and subsequently became bookkeeper for the
Iowa Packing Company at Sabula, Iowa. He remained with them for a
year and then went to Sioux City, where he was a partner in the
firm of Williamson, Davis & Company, dealers in cattle. The
association was continued for three years, after which the
company dissolved and Mr. Williamson entered the banking field as
a bookkeeper for Doolittle & Son, bankers of Hopkinton. He
entered their employ on the 12th of May, 1884, and in 1890 he was
promoted to assistant cashier, while two years later he was made
cashier. In 1893 the name of the bank was changed to the
Hopkinton Bank and Mr. Williamson became vice president of the
institution, so continuing until 1900, when the bank was
incorporated as the Hopkinton State Bank. He was made vice
president of the new concern and on the 4th of December, 1912,
was elected president, which position he still holds. His long
connection with the institution has made him thoroughly familiar
with all of the details of its operation and as he is a constant
student of financial problems and conditions he is also
acquainted with the trend of affairs in the larger financial
world. With the assistance of the other officers and the
directors of the bank he has been able to secure its steady
growth and at the same time he has zealously guarded the
interests of stockholders and depositors. Aside from his
connection with the bank he has a number of business interests,
owning a stock farm of about one thousand acres and also tracts
of land in Minnesota and Canada. He was likewise the originator
of the Hopkinton Cooperative Creamery Company and was one of the
organizers of the Farmers Supply Company, which deals in lumber,
feed and fuel. For a number of years he has been a trustee of
Lenox College and has always the interests of that institution at
heart.
On the 29th of July, 1885, Mr. Williamson was
united in marriage with Miss Nellie A. Doolittle, who was born at
Delhi, Iowa, November 9,1862. She attended the public schools of
her native city, college at Rockford, Illinois, and at Grinnell,
Iowa, and was graduated from Lenox College at Hopkinton with the
class of 1883. Her father was Judge F. B, Doolittle, of Delhi,
who was one of the most highly respected residents of that city.
The following children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Williamson:
Edmond Doolittle, born July 10, 1887; Benjamin P., who was born
July 7, 1890, and was a teller in the bank at the time of his
death, which occurred when he was twenty two years of age; John
C., born June 1, 1892; Harlan J., July 18, 1894; George W.,
September 6, 1896; Perry F., September 24, 1897; Nelly A.,
December 15, 1898; and Elizabeth Rose, August 5, 1902. The first
and third sons are operating the stock farm and the other
children are in school.
Mr. Williamson is a republican in politics and
his religious affiliation is with the Presbyterian church.
Fraternally he is a member of the Masonic order and has taken the
thirty second degree, belonging to the Des Moines Consistory. The
family reside upon their farm, which is situated one mile south
of Hopkinton, the location enabling them to enjoy the delights of
both farm and town life. Mr. Williamson is a man of more than
usual energy and as his activities are always directed by sound
judgment he has been able to accomplish a great deal and that
without violating any of the principles of honor and right. His
unswerving loyalty to the highest standards of ethics has won for
him the sincere respect of all who know him and he is accounted
one of the most valued citizens of Hopkinton.
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