Williams, Samuel, 1743-1817
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Williams, Samuel, 1743-1817
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Williams, Samuel, 1743-1817
Williams, Samuel
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Williams, Samuel
Williams, Revd Mr. Samuel, 1743-1817
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Williams, Revd Mr. Samuel, 1743-1817
Williams, S. 1743-1817
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Williams, S. 1743-1817
Williams, S. 1743-1817 (Samuel),
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Williams, S. 1743-1817 (Samuel),
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Biographical History
Samuel Williams (1743-1817) was the son of Rev. Warham Williams (1699-1751) of Waltham, Mass. In 1761 he graduated from Harvard College and became minister of Bradford, Mass., until 1779 when he was chosen professor of philosophy at Harvard. Williams was a member of the American Philosophical Society, helped organize the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and served on various state commissions. Forced to resign his post at Harvard due to a scandal involving forgery, Williams moved to Rutland, Vt., where he became minister and a founder of the University of Vermont. He also wrote various historic and scientific works and served as editor of the Rutland Herald from 1794 to 1804.
Clergyman, teacher, publisher, and producer of almanacs, of Bradford and Cambridge, Mass.; later moved to Vermont; also known as S. Williams.
Clergyman and historian of Bradford, Vt.
Samuel Williams (1743-1817) was the son of Reverend Warham Williams (1699-1751; Harvard College AB 1719) and Abigail Leonard Williams (1703-1789) of Waltham, Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard College AB 1761 and in 1768 married Jane Kilborn Williams (1746-1829) of Rowley. They lived in Bradford, Massachusetts and he served as a Congregational minister. In 1780 Williams was appointed Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard College but he had to resign from Harvard in a forgery and financial scandal in 1788. He then moved to Rutland, Vermont and in 1794 published Natural and civil history of Vermont. Between 1794-1804 he was the editor of the Rutland Herald and he later published the Rural Magazine (1795-1796). Samuel and Jane Williams had five children: Jane Williams Osgood (b1769); Samuel Williams (1770-1774); Leonard Williams (1776-1812); Charles Williams (1779-1779); and Charles Kilborn Williams (1782-1853). See finding aid for extensive information on the rest of the Williams family included in this collection.
Williams graduated from Harvard in 1761 and taught mathematics and natural philosophy at Harvard.
Samuel Williams (1743-1817) led an adventurous life, participating in scientific expeditions to Newfoundland and Penobscot Bay; teaching astronomy, meteorology, magnetism and other subjects at Harvard College and at the University of Vermont (which he helped to found); serving as minister in Massachusetts and Vermont; publishing a newspaper and a journal; and authoring the first history of the state of Vermont. Williams was Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard from 1780 until 1788, when he resigned, following accusations of forgery in a financial settlement, and moved to Vermont. He remained in Vermont for the rest of his life, where he resumed ministerial work and also became involved in various academic and publishing endeavors.
Williams was born to Abigail Leonard (1703-1789) and the Reverend Warham Williams (1699-1761) on April 23, 1743 in Waltham, Massachusetts. He received an A.B. from Harvard College in 1761, though he was absent from commencement exercises because he was on an expedition to Newfoundland, accompanying professor John Winthrop on a voyage to observe the transit of Venus on June 6, 1761. Following graduation, Williams taught school in Waltham for two years before becoming a licensed preacher in Concord in 1763 and Congregational minister of Bradford, Massachusetts in 1765. He remained in Bradford as minister for the following fifteen years, from 1765 to 1780, combining his religious work with intensive studies and teaching in the areas of philosophy, theology, astronomy and other sciences. Williams married Jane Kilbourne in May 1768; they would have five children together.
In 1780, Williams was appointed Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard; he was the third individual to hold the position. His research was primarily in astronomy, meteorology and magnetism, and he expanded Harvard's curriculum in these areas; he also lectured on a wide range of other scientific topics. During his tenure as Hollis Professor, Williams was involved in several important expeditions, including one to observe – behind British enemy lines – a solar eclipse at Penobscot Bay in 1780 and another to survey the boundary between Massachusetts and New York State in 1787. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and was a member of the Meteorological Society at Mannheim, the American Philosophical Society and the New York Historical Society. Williams taught at Harvard for eight years, from 1780 until 1788, when he resigned in the face of charges brought against him by the Board of Overseers. The Overseers accused Williams of forgery in the settlement of an estate of which he had been appointed treasurer.
Williams left Cambridge the same day he submitted his resignation from Harvard and moved his family to Rutland, Vermont, where he was preacher from 1789 to 1796. He was also founder and co-publisher of The Rutland Herald, first published in 1794, and a short-lived monthly journal, The Rural Magazine: or Vermont Repository, published from 1795 to 1796. He assisted in the founding of the University of Vermont in 1791 and would later lecture there, from 1807 to 1809, on natural philosophy and astronomy. In 1794, he published the Natural and Civil History of Vermont, the earliest full-length history of the state; it was published in a larger second edition in 1809. He was appointed by Governor Tichenor to survey the northern boundary of the state of Vermont in 1806.
Samuel Williams died in Rutland, Vermont on January 2, 1817.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/29912427
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85247731
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n85247731
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Subjects
Booksellers and bookselling
Astronomy
Astronomy
Boundaries
Meteorology
Natural history
Newspapers
Sermons, American
Sermons, American
Sermons, American
Sermons, American
Sermons, American
Surveys
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Clergy
Historians
Scientists
Legal Statuses
Places
Vermont
AssociatedPlace
Bradford (Vt.)
AssociatedPlace
New York
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Vermont
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New York (State)
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New York (State)
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Massachusetts
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Cambridge (Mass.)
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Rutland (Vt.)
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Rutland (Vt.)
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Massachusetts
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Massachusetts
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New York (State)
AssociatedPlace
Vermont
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Bradford (Vt.)
AssociatedPlace
Massachusetts
AssociatedPlace
Rutland (Vt.)
AssociatedPlace
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