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  1. William James Sidis's About. William James Sidis was born on April 1, 1898 (age 46) in New York City, New York, United States. He is a Celebrity Mathematician. Best remembered as a child mathematical prodigy, this New York man began attending Harvard University when he was just eleven years old. After teaching briefly at Rice University and ...

  2. William James Sidis ('Billy') boggled minds of normal intellectuals and theoreticians. He was born on April Fool's Day in 1898. He became a strange combination of an April Fool and a 20th century genius vastly beyond common sentient discernment. Boris and Sarah met each other some time after they entered the USA.

  3. Jul 17, 2015 · His Ukrainian-born father, Boris Sidis, had emigrated to the United States in 1887, after two years’ imprisonment in czarist Russia as punishment for teaching peasants to read. His mother, the former Sarah Mandelbaum, was also from Russia, and had emigrated with her father in 1889, at age 13, after surviving a pogrom.

  4. Sidis was raised in a particular manner by his father, psychologist Boris Sidis and mother, Sarah (Mandelbaum) Sidis, M.D., wished heir son to be gifted and believed in nurturing in him a precocious and fearless love of knowledge. Sidis could read The New York Times at 18 months.

  5. Sarah Sidis formerly Mandelbaum. Born 2 Oct 1874 in Russian Empire. Daughter of Unknown Mandelbaum and [mother unknown] Sister of Grace (Mandelbaum) Fadiman. Wife of Boris Sidis — married 24 Dec 1894 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States. Mother of William James Sidis and Helena Sidis. Died 9 Jul 1959at age 84 in Miami, Miami-Dade ...

  6. Jun 26, 1986 · Boris Sidis was to attend Harvard where he achieved notoriety in the fields of psychiatry and psychology and was influential in the circle around Josiah Royce, William James, and other famous thinkers. Sarah Mandelbaum was born in Russia and immigrated to America where she met Boris Sidis and was tutored by him.

  7. Editor’s note: In her new book, Ann Hulbert ’77 explores the fascination with child genius over the past century in America. She probes the stories of 16 exceptionally gifted young people, including two precocious students who arrived at Harvard in 1909. Ours is an era, a popular parenting adviser has written, when Lake-Wobegon-style ...

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