Sarah Harris' younger sister, Mary A. Harris Williams, was born on September 29, 1817 in Norwich, CT. Mary was also a student at Crandall's Canterbury Boarding School when it was an academy for "little misses of color," enrolling when she was only sixteen years old. Like Fayerweather, Harris Williams became a notable educator and activist. On April 19, 1845, Mary married her husband, Pelluman Williams, an African American teacher from Connecticut. Pelluman was the Vice President of the Connecticut Convention of Colored Men in 1849, advocating for Black suffrage and civil rights. Both Mary Harris Williams and her husband advocated for access to education for all African American people. In 1864, the Williams moved from
New York City to New Orleans, Louisiana. Four years later, in 1868, Harris Williams became a professor of English at
Straight University alongside her husband, who was a principal there. At Straight University, Harris Williams helped educate newly freed enslaved people in the South. Straight University, is now known as
Dillard University, a Historically Black college, founded after Straight University was burned down twice, once in 1877, and again in 1891. While the date of Mary A. Harris Williams's death is not known, her legacy is still upheld through the institutions she once helped build and the continuation of her family's legacy throughout the state of Connecticut. ==Death==