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・ William Benson (swimmer)
・ William Benson Craig
・ William Benson Earle
・ William Benson Mayo
・ William Benson Storey
・ William Benswanger
・ William Bent
・ William Bent Berczy
・ William Bentinck
・ William Bentinck (Royal Navy officer)
・ William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland
・ William Bentinck, 2nd Duke of Portland
・ William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland
・ William Bentinck, Viscount Woodstock
・ William Bentinck-Smith
William Bentley
・ William Bentley (disambiguation)
・ William Bentney
・ William Benton
・ William Benton (senator)
・ William Benton (writer)
・ William Benton Boggs
・ William Benton Clulow
・ William Bentsen
・ William Benyon
・ William Berardino
・ William Berczy
・ William Berczy Public School
・ William Bereford
・ William Berenberg


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William Bentley : ウィキペディア英語版
William Bentley

William Bentley (June 22, 1759, Boston, Massachusetts – December 29, 1819, Salem, Massachusetts) was an American Unitarian minister, scholar, columnist, and diarist. He was a polymath who possessed the second best library in the United States (after that of Thomas Jefferson), and was an indefatigable reader and collector of information at the local national and international level. Starting in 1794, he produced a weekly news summary of world events for the local newspaper the ''Salem Gazette.'' He provided a highly sophisticated capsule of current political and cultural news, set in a broad historical context. His unsigned reports were widely copied and reproduced in the young nation's newspapers. Bentley believed in Republican enlightenment and the widest possible diffusion of knowledge. He was upset by the increasingly shrill tone of the partisan press, and the superficiality of much journalism.〔Richard D Brown, ''Knowledge Is Power: The Diffusion of Information in Early America, 1700-1865'' (1991) pp 197-216〕
==Career==
Bentley graduated from Harvard University in 1777, and worked as a schoolteacher and then a tutor of Latin and Greek at Harvard. On September 24, 1783, he was ordained as a minister and became pastor of the Second Congregational Church in Salem, known as the East Church, where he remained until his death in 1819.
Bentley was well liked by his parishioners because of his philosophy of emphasizing good works over rigid doctrine. He himself lived modestly, and was a boarder at the Crowninshield-Bentley House from 1791 until his death in 1819. He gave almost half his salary to help the poorer members of his congregation. He often shared the East Church pulpit with pastors of other sects. He was a strong supporter of public education and frequent tutor and substitute teacher; among the students he taught was Nathaniel Bowditch. The Bentley School in Salem is named for him.

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