[1] He went on to play for Cheshire in the Minor Counties Championship, debuting during the 1909 season.
[2] Beginning with the 1912 season, Williams, working as a groundsman at Lord's, also turned out for the MCC in several non-first-class matches.
[4] In the match, he scored 11 not out in the MCC's first innings, which included a partnership of 39 runs for the ninth wicket with former Test player Jack Hearne.
[5] In the First World War, Williams served as a private in the 10th Battalion of the Cheshire Regiment.
He was killed in Thiepval, France, in July 1916, as part of the ongoing Battle of the Somme.