Sidney Willard
Sidney Willard (September 19, 1780 – December 6, 1856) was an American academic and politician who served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, on the Massachusetts Governor's Council and as the second Mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts.[2] Willard was the Librarian of Harvard from 1800 to 1805.[1] From 1807 to 1831[1] he was the Hancock Professor of Hebrew and other Oriental Languages at Harvard College.[2] Willard was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1808.[3] Willard was the son of Harvard president Joseph Willard and Mary (Sheafe) Willard.[1][2] Willard was a member of the Anthology Club, and a founder of The Literary Miscellany, established and edited the American Monthly Review (4 vols., 1832/3), was editor of The Christian Register, contributed to numerous periodicals, and published a Hebrew Grammar (Cambridge, 1817), and Memoirs of Youth and Manhood (2 vols., 1855).[4] His son in law, John Bartlett, was an American writer and publisher whose best known work, Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, has been continually revised and reissued for a century after his death. References
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