Thaddeus William Harris was born in
Dorchester, Massachusetts on November 12, 1795. His father,
Thaddeus Mason Harris, was a Unitarian minister who served at the church on
Meeting House Hill and had also for a time served as librarian of Harvard. Harris himself received his undergraduate degree at Harvard in 1815, and then went on to study
medicine there, receiving his
M.D. in 1820. He went into medical practice with Amos Holbrook until 1831, first in Milton and then in Dorchester, Massachusetts. In 1824 he married Catherine Holbrook, a daughter of his medical partner. Thaddeus and Catherine had 12 children. By 1836 he had published thirty-three papers, mostly in agricultural or horticultural journals (especially the
New England Farmer). While his published works focused on agricultural entomology, his prolific correspondence with other entomologists was more often related to insect classification and other technical aspects. In 1837 Harris was appointed by the Massachusetts Commission on the Zoological and Botanical Survey to prepare a report on the insects of Massachusetts. The results,
A Treatise on Some of the Insects of New England, Which Are Injurious to Vegetation, was published in 1842. A second edition appeared in 1852, and a third, illustrated edition was issued posthumously in 1862. He sought a permanent appointment to the faculty in 1842, but the position was given to
Asa Gray instead. He was one of the founders of the
Massachusetts Horticultural Society. He was elected a Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1827. ==Notes==