Edwin Eliott Willoughby (1899-1959)

Edwin Eliott Willoughby (1899-1959)

Edwin Willoughby was born in Philadelphia on November 5, 1899, the eldest of the three children of printer Frank Faul Willoughby and his wife Annie. While Edwin was still a child, the family moved to New Jersey. In 1918, Willoughby entered Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania with the class of 1922, and participated in the Student Army Air Corps as a private during the First World War. He remained at Dickinson after the war, and was active in the Belles Lettres Literary Society, the New Jersey Club, and the YMCA. He also served as associate editor of the 1922 Microcosm. After receiving his B.A. from Dickinson in 1922, Willoughby earned his M.A. from the University of Chicago two years later while employed as a senior assistant at the Newberry Library of Chicago; ten years later in 1934 he earned his Ph.D. from there as well. He remained at the library until 1929 when he accepted a Guggenheim fellowship to study in London, England for two years.

Upon his return Willoughby accepted the position of professor and acting director of the Library Science Department of the College of William and Mary; his tenure there lasted from 1932 until 1935. During the summer of 1934 he returned to Europe to further his studies on a grant from the American Council of Learned Societies. In 1935 he left William and Mary to become chief bibliographer at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C. His career at the Folger Library lasted until 1958, during which time Willoughby established himself as an internationally renowned scholar on the printing of Shakespeare and the history of the King James Bible. The author of five books and over 300 scholarly articles, he lectured at universities throughout England and was a member of the Royal Society of Literature. In the U.S. he was an honorary member of Phi Beta Kappa, and his alma mater awarded him an honorary degree in 1940. In addition, he was a member of several library and literary societies in England and the U.S.

Citing health reasons, Willoughby retired from the Folger Library in 1958 and returned to his home in New Jersey. He battled a neurological disorder for a long time, and it eventually led to his death on October 2, 1959. Although he had been engaged at one point, he was never married. Edwin Willoughby was survived by his mother, brother Charles, and sister Frances, who had followed him at Dickinson and graduated in 1927.

Author of Post: 
Dickinson College Archives
Date of Post: 
2005
College Relationship: 
Alumnus/Alumna Class Year: 
Honorary Degree - Year: 
1940