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  1. George Henry Williams (* 23. März 1823 in New Lebanon, Columbia County, New York; † 4. April 1910 in Portland, Oregon) war ein US-amerikanischer Jurist und Politiker. Er vertrat den Bundesstaat Oregon im US-Senat und amtierte als Justizminister (Attorney General) im Kabinett von Präsident Ulysses S. Grant .

  2. George Henry Williams (March 26, 1823 – April 4, 1910) was an American judge and politician. He served as chief justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, was the 32nd Attorney General of the United States, and was elected Oregon's U.S. senator, and served one term.

  3. George Huntston Williams (April 7, 1914, in Huntsburg – October 6, 2000) was an American academic, historian of Christianity, and professor of nontrinitarian Christian theology. His works focused on the historical research of nontrinitarian Christian movements that emerged during the Protestant Reformation , primarily Socinianism ...

  4. George H. Williams was a Democratic politician and officeholder in Oregon from the mid-1850s to the early twentieth century. He was chief justice of the territorial supreme court, a delegate to Oregon’s constitutional convention, U.S. senator from Oregon, the first Oregonian to serve in a presidential cabinet, a member of national and ...

  5. Leben und Wirken. George H. Williams war Professor für unitarische Theologie an der Divinity School der Harvard University. Er ist besonders durch seine historischen Arbeiten hervorgetreten. Neben einer Geschichte der Divinity School (1954), die 1826 von unitarischen Theologen gegründet wurde und die später eine der ...

  6. 20. März 2003 · George Huntston Williams, a church historian of extraordinary range and productivity, and an important contributor to the revival of Harvard Divinity School after the second World War, died on October 6, 2000, at the age of 86.

  7. Unitarian Church of All Souls in New York City. Recalling the Rev. Henry Whitney Bellows’s memorable depiction of a true liberal, George Huntston Williams was in every respect a “large round-about soul.” His work and life, each greater than the sum of their parts, were replete with historic moments.