I've had a passion for my family history ever since I was in Jr. High School, when my Nana told me about the birth of the Maybelline company. She demonstrated how my great auntie Mabel mixed ashes from a burnt cork with Vaseline, dabbed it on her brows and lashes to darken them and hoped the concoction would make them grow. Nana's love for Maybelline's history ignited a fire in my belly as she painted colorful pictures with her words. She explained how my great uncle Tom Lyle Williams, a 19 year old entrepreneur with a small mail-order business in 1915, realized the value of his sister Mabel's idea and decided to market it as mascara and name it Maybelline in her honor.
My grandfather Preston with his
little sister Eve Williams, 1908

My father - great uncle Tom Lyle - Nana 1967.
When a fire burned down my home in 1993 and all my treasures were lost, I turned to my father, Bill Williams, to help me reconstruct a 963 page manuscript, however, it wasn't until I met Bettie Youngs, a publisher who specializes in Memoirs, that a real book was born.
History is the greatest gift one can pass on and connecting with your ancestors is priceless. My Nana's words still ring in my ears today, "Sharrie Darling" she'd say, "you can lose everything, but nobody can ever take your background away."


