Tom Lyle Williams and Tom Lyle Williams Jr
Shaped by both his familial ties and his personal trajectory. Born in 1912 in Kentucky to Tom Lyle Sr. and his first wife, Bennie Gibbs, Tom Jr. (often referred to as "Cecil" in his early years) grew up during the formative years of Maybelline, which his father established in 1915. While Tom Jr. was not a central figure in the company's day-to-day operations or its creative genesis—unlike his aunt Mabel, who inspired the brand, or his father’s partner Emery Shaver, who drove advertising, or his uncle Noel who gave Tom Lyle the seed money to start Maybelline - he nonetheless became part of its legacy through inheritance and executive involvement.
Tom Jr.’s early life intersected with Maybelline’s rise as his father built the company from a small mail-order business in Chicago into a cosmetics powerhouse. By the 1930s, as Maybelline expanded its product line and global reach, Tom Jr. was a teenager, often captured in family photos alongside his father and grandfather, Thomas Jefferson Williams. His upbringing was influenced by the wealth and prominence Maybelline brought the Williams family, though his parents’ marriage ended in annulment shortly after his birth, leaving him primarily under his mother's care.
As an adult, Tom Jr. assumed a formal role within the Maybelline Company, eventually rising to the position of President at Maybelline Co., Chicago, and General Partner at Williams Investments, a financial arm tied to the family’s business interests. This occurred during the company’s peak years, particularly after World War II, when Maybelline became an international brand. However, his tenure was not marked by the same visionary leadership as his father’s.
Tom Sr., alongside Emery Shaver, had been the driving force behind Maybelline’s innovation and marketing, while Tom Jr.’s role appears to have been more administrative, leveraging his position as heir rather than creator. The company remained headquartered in Chicago until its sale, and Tom Jr. was part of the family ownership structure that profited when Tom Sr. sold Maybelline to Plough Inc. in 1967 for a reported $135 million—a deal prompted partly by Emery’s death in 1964 and Tom Sr.’s subsequent withdrawal from active management.
His death in 1978, at age 66, just two years after his father’s passing in 1976, marked the end of the direct Williams lineage’s involvement with Maybelline, which by then had transitioned into the hands of corporate entities, eventually becoming part of L’OrĂ©al in 1996.
In the broader arc of Maybelline’s history, Tom Lyle Williams Jr. represents both continuity and contrast. He was a beneficiary of the empire his father built—sharing in the wealth and prestige alongside other family members when the company was sold—but his contributions were overshadowed by the foundational work of Tom Lyle Sr, Noel, Mabel, and Emery. His story underscores the personal dynamics within the Williams family, where business success coexisted with private challenges, and highlights how Maybelline’s legacy evolved from a family-driven enterprise to a global brand beyond the Williams name.