Samuel Williams (319)
Election date: 1772
Samuel Williams (23 April 1743β2 January 1817) was a minister, educator, and a member of the American Philosophical Society, elected in 1772. Born in Waltham, Massachusetts, Williams entered Harvard and later graduated in 1761. While at Harvard, he gained the attention of notable scientist and professor John Winthrop, whom Williams accompanied shortly before his graduation to observe the 1761 transit of Venus. Returning to Waltham, Williams found little opportunity for further work in astronomy and began studying as a Presbyterian minister. Working as a reverend in Bradford, Massachusetts, he continued his astronomic and scientific inquiries and regularly featured in the Salem newspaper. In 1780, he dedicated himself full time to scientific pursuits, trading his pastorate in Bradford for a post as Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard. His teaching was commemorated by the likes of John Quincy Adams, a pupil of his, and his papers were published by the APS and American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Like many of his contemporaries, his writing and lectures spanned various fields and topics, ranging from astronomy, heat, electricity, air, magnetism, earthquakes, eclipses, and weather phenomenon. He earned honorary LL.D. degrees from Yale and Edinburgh, and election to the Meteorological Society of Manheim. Despite such high honors, Williamsβs career came crashing down when he was accused of mishandling funds, spending too much money on his wife, and worst of all, forgery. This forced him to leave Harvard in 1788, and, now an outcast, he resigned to the village of Rutland in Vermont. He took up priestly duties once again, only returning to academia to give lectures at the University of Vermont. Meanwhile, he also founded and edited the Rutland Herald, continued his activity with the APS, published his sermons, and documented the landscape and history of Vermont. He died of a brief illness in his home in Rutland.
Publication: Rutland [VT]: Printed by James Lyon, by order of legislature, [1794]
Publication: Salem [MA], New-England: Printed by Samuel and Ebenezer Hall, 1775.
Publication: Printed in Rutland (Vermont): by Anthony Haswell, [1792]
Publication: New-Haven: Printed and published by W. Storer, Jun, 1824.
Subjects:United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783.
Publication: Boston: Printed by John Boyle in Marlborough-Street, [1780]
Subjects:Ordination sermons -- Early works to 1800. | Ordination sermons.
Publication: [Rutland, VT]: Rrom [sic] the press of A. Haswell in Rutland, [1792]
Subjects:Patriotism -- United States.
Publication: Windsor [VT]: Printed by Thomas M. Pomroy, 1812.
Subjects:John the Baptist's Day -- Vermont -- Rutland. | Freemasonry. | Sociology. | Religion and sociology.
Publication: Printed at Walpole, Newhampshire: by Isaiah Thomas and David Carlisle, Jun. Sold at their bookstore, in Walpole, and by said Thomas, at his bookstore, in Worcester, [1794]
Subjects:Vermont -- History. | New England -- History.
Publication: Stonington [Conn.]: Printed by the author, 1827.
Publication: Boston, New-England: Printed by Thomas and John Fleet, 1766.
Subjects:Regeneration (Theology)
Publication: Rutland [VT]: printed by J. Kirkaldie, for S. Williams, & Co. A few rods north of the State-House, 1795.
Subjects:United States -- Politics and government -- 1789-1809 -- Periodicals -- Early works to 1800. | United States -- Economic history -- 18th century -- Periodicals -- Early works to 1800. | Judaism -- History -- Periodicals -- Early works to 1800. | Medicine -- 18th century -- Periodicals -- Early works to 1800. | United States -- History -- Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 -- Periodicals -- Early works to 1800.
Publication: Salem [Mass.], New-England: Printed by Samuel and Ebenezer Hall, 1773.
Publication: Rutland, VT: Fay and Davison, 1815.
Subjects:United States -- History -- War of 1812.
Publication: [Windsor] Vermont: printed, and sold wholesale and retail, by Alden Spooner, at his printing-office in Windsor, [1794]
Subjects:Almanacs, English -- Early works to 1800. | Vermont -- Registers.