Ethan Allen Andrews
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Ethan Allen Andrews (1787 – 1858) was an American educator. He was born in Connecticut and graduated at Yale in 1810. He practiced law for several years, then (1822-1828) was professor in the University of North Carolina of ancient languages, after which he taught at New Haven and Boston. He published a number of Latin textbooks and in 1850 a Latin-English lexicon, based on Freund which went through many revisions and came to be known as Harper's Latin Dictionary (1907). He published with Solomon Stoddard a Latin grammar, long very popular. A monograph, Slavery and the Domestic Slave Trade in the United States, was printed in Boston in 1836. Other publications include " First Latin Book"; "Latin Reader"; "Viri Romae"; "Latin Lessons"; "Andrews' and Stoddard's Latin Grammar"; " Synopsis of Latin Grammar"; " Questions on the Latin Grammar"; " Latin Exercises"; " Key to Latin Exercises"; "Exercises in Latin Etymology"; "Caesar's Commentaries"; " Sallust "; and " Ovid ".
[edit] Publications
- Hubbard Winslow, Eulogy on the Late Professor E. A. Andrews (Boston, 1858)
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.

