Andrew Oliver (335)
Election date: 1773Andrew Oliver (13 November 1731–6 December 1799) was a jurist, scientist, and a member of the American Philosophical Society, elected in 1773. Born in Boston to a politically connected family, he attended Harvard college, graduating in 1749 before continuing his studies and earning master's degrees at Yale (1751) and Harvard (1752). After marrying, Oliver relocated to his wife’s hometown of Salem. He held minor public offices before becoming a county judge in 1761 and a representative of Salem to the Massachusetts General Court the following year. He had a complicated relationship with the growing rebel movement, oftentimes voting in favor of reductions in taxes and duties and yet was a member of a loyalist family and occupied a Tory position for a time (before realizing it made him a target and resigning). He joined a local militia in an attempt to regain approval, but upon asking to be excused from a meeting due to unfavorable weather, his constituents were left unsatisfied. When the war broke out, his loyalist family went into hiding while he remained in Salem—not for any political reason—but rather to continue his scientific inquiries into the nature of air. Most notably, Oliver proposed that comet tails were made up of air, and that life could exist in such air. Inspired by Benjamin Franklin and other contemporaries, he also asserted that electricity permeates air and studied its role in causing thunderstorms. Along with John Adams, he helped found the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in Massachusetts. In the final years of his life, Oliver’s scientific activity mostly ceased due to his gout and declining finances and he died in such a state, at home in Salem. (ANB)
Three editions: one in 1772 (Salem [Mass.], New-England), one in 1777 (Amsterdam), one in 1811 (Boston)
One edition. Per ESTC: "An elegy on the late Professor Winthrop. By a gentleman, formerly his pupil."--p. iii. Attributed to Andrew Oliver.