The Encyclopedia Americana (1920)/Hillard, George Stillman

HILLARD, hil'ạrd, George Stillman, American author and lawyer: b. Machias, Me., 22 Sept. 1808; d. Boston, 21 Jan. 1879. He was graduated from Harvard in 1828, and from the Harvard Law School four years later. He was a member of the Massachusetts senate in 1850, where his policy as a legislator was warmly commended by Daniel Webster; a member of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention in 1853; and United States district attorney in 1866-70. Though successful as a lawyer his tastes were largely literary; he was well known as a lecturer; was editor of the Christian Register with George Ripley, and associate editor of the Boston Courier; wrote &lsquo;Six Months in Italy&rsquo; (1853); &lsquo;Life of George Ticknor&rsquo; (with Mrs. Ticknor); &lsquo;Life of George B. McClellan&rsquo; (1864), and edited a series of school readers which bore his name, and the works of Spenser.