Her father was Chief Justice of Vermont, and Governor of the State during 1801, 1802, and 1803. His opinions are still regarded as legal authority both for their literary excellence, and their thorough exposition of the law.
Miss Williams entered Troy Seminary in 1841, and graduated in 1842.
Died in 1858. (from Emma Willard and Her Pupils, or Fifty Years of Troy Female Seminary, ed. by Mrs. A.W. Fairbanks; pub. by Mrs. Russell Sage, New York, 1898)
Her father was Chief Justice of Vermont, and Governor of the State during 1801, 1802, and 1803. His opinions are still regarded as legal authority both for their literary excellence, and their thorough exposition of the law.
Miss Williams entered Troy Seminary in 1841, and graduated in 1842.
Died in 1858. (from Emma Willard and Her Pupils, or Fifty Years of Troy Female Seminary, ed. by Mrs. A.W. Fairbanks; pub. by Mrs. Russell Sage, New York, 1898)
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