Background
Williams was born in Bontnewydd near Street Asaph Wales in 1832, and (as many early vets) appears to have had a background in farriery.
Williams was born in Bontnewydd near Street Asaph Wales in 1832, and (as many early vets) appears to have had a background in farriery.
University of Edinburgh.
He wrote several standard works on veterinary science. He enrolled in the new Dick Veterinary College in Edinburgh under William Dick in 1855. He qualified Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in 1857, and set up a veterinary practice in Bradford, Yorkshire, England.
In 1867 he returned to his alma mater in Edinburgh to become third principal of the Dick Veterinary College, replacing the brief principalship of Colonel James H B Hallen FRSE who was urgently called to India to address an outbreak of cattle plague.
Walter George Burnett Dickinson FRSE was amongst his many students. In 1868 Williams was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh his proposer being Sir William Turner.
In 1873 Williams founded the New Veterinary College in Edinburgh, in direct competition to William Dick"s College. The new college was housed in Gayfield House on East London Street.
In 1883, due to growing success, the College commissioned William Hamilton Beattie to design a purpose-built building on the east side of Elm Row, at the head of Leith Walk where it remained until closure in 1904.
The building, later also serving as a British Broadcasting Corporation Scotland studio, is now converted into student housing. Williams died on 12 November 1900, at 1 Crawford Place, Edinburgh. He was interred at Warriston Cemetery.
His white marble stone is flat to the ground and disappearing from view.
lieutenant lies on the upper section of the vaults to the west side. Williams married Caroline Owen.
Her death in 1867 affected Williams greatly. Their son William Owen Williams FRSE (1860-1911), was also a veterinarian and worked with his father at the Elm Row college.
Following his father"s death the college lost momentum and in 1904 William Owen Williams moved to Liverpool to set up a new veterinary college, being officially Professor of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery at Liverpool University.