The strongest man in Kerrville: ‘Chief’ William Thomas Tarver
Published in the Kerrville Daily Times on January 17, 2026 William Thomas Tarver is shown with his mail hack and team of horses in 1918 in front of the old Kerrville train depot, which is now home to Rails, A Cafe at the Depot. On the evening of Feb. 21, 1930, the tinkling bell of a telephone woke Kerrville resident Tom Tarver from a deep slumber. When the call was answered, the telephone operator announced that Seattle, Washington, was calling. Tarver could not figure out who on Earth would be calling him at such an ungodly hour. His “mental gymnastics” while the call was being connected failed to “recall any rich relatives, or what have you, in Seattle.” The call came from a young man named Field Williford. Young Williford had spent his childhood in Kerrville and “an attack of homesickness for the scenes of his boyhood in Kerrville” prompted him to call and ask Tarver about folks in the old hometown. The call cost Williford $10 (a lot of money in 1930), but he sa...