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Peter Folger (December 26, 1905 ... He was the son of James Athearn Folger, Jr. (born c. 1864) and wife ... They shared joint custody of their two children. On June ...
[2] [4] Morrell was an indentured servant and Folger bought her freedom from Hugh Peters for £20. [2] They had nine children by 1669, the last of whom, Abiah Folger, married Josiah Franklin, and was the mother of Benjamin Franklin. [2] At the Vineyard, Folger supported himself by teaching school and surveying land.
[2]: 13 Later, Peter became a convert to Baptist Christianity, and Abiah was raised as a Baptist. [2]: 14 Abiah was the youngest of Peter and Mary Folger's ten children. [2]: 14 At age 21 and unmarried, Abiah moved from Nantucket to Boston to live with an older sister and her husband, who were members of the Puritan South Church.
Folger was born in Nantucket, Massachusetts, the son of Samuel Brown Folger (b. 1795) and wife Nancy Hiller (b. 1798). His father was a master blacksmith who had invested in a tryworks and bought two ships. They had nine children of which James was the second youngest. The Folger family roots can be traced back to Peter Folger, an English ...
On September 1, 1730, the couple held a ceremony for friends and family in which they announced they would live as husband and wife. [13] They had two children together: Francis Folger "Franky" (born 1732), who died of smallpox in 1736 at the age of four, and Sarah "Sally" (born 1743).
Tristram Coffin (or Coffyn) [fn 1] (c. 1609 – 2 October 1681) was an immigrant to Massachusetts from England.He came to the Massachusetts colony with his family in 1642. In 1659 he led a group of investors that bought Nantucket from Thomas Mayhew for thirty pounds and two beaver hats. [2]
Peter Folger (1905–1980), American businessperson; Peter Folger (Nantucket settler) (1617–1690), Baptist missionary, teacher, and surveyor, grandfather of Benjamin Franklin; Walter Folger Jr. (1765–1849), American politician; William M. Folger (1844–1928), United States Navy rear admiral and grandson of Mayhew Folger
Lydia Folger Fowler (May 5, 1823 [1] – January 26, 1879) was a pioneering American physician, professor of medicine, and activist.She was the second American woman to earn a medical degree (after Elizabeth Blackwell) and one of the first American women in medicine and a prominent woman in science.