Phyllis Williams was born November 30, 1912, in Brooklyn, New York.[1] Williams received a B.A. degree from Wellesley College in 1934.[1]
She first visited Samothrace in 1938, as a doctoral student on the New York University Institute of Fine Arts team led by professor Karl Leo Heinrich Lehmann. She was awarded her PhD in 1943 and married Lehmann the following year.[1] She was assistant field director of the excavations at Samothrace 1948โ1960 and acting director 1960โ1965, and she remained closely involved with Samothrace for the rest of her career. She was a member of the faculty of Smith College from 1946 to 1978, and was Dean of Smith College from 1965 to 1970.
^The Hellenistic statue, of the second century BCE, found in three large sections, is conserved in the museum at the Samothrace site.
^She identified them in 1950, in a drawer at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna; an Austrian team in the 1870s had recovered a Roman Victory in the 1870s, and the unidentified fingers, not part of that sculpture, had been stored and forgotten.