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Samuel
Fuller
BIRTH: 20
January 1580, Redenhall, Norfolk..
MARRIAGE:
* Alice Glascock, before 1613.
* Agnes Carpenter, 24 April 1613, Leiden.
* Bridget Lee, 27 May 1617, Leiden.
Death: Between
9 August 1633 and 26 September 1633, at Plymouth.
Children:
Children by Agnes: two unnamed children who died young and were buried
in Leiden.
Children by Bridget: Samuel and Mercy.
Samuel Fuller
has been generally identified as the son of Robert Fuller, baptized on
20 January 1580 at Redenhall, Norfolk. However, a number of genealogical
scholars and Mayflower researchers, including Robert S. Wakefield, Robert
Sherman, Robert Leigh Ward, Robert C. Anderson, Eugene Stratton, Leslie
Mahler, and others, have all questioned the identification over the past
couple of decades. The current identification is based upon circumstantial
evidence only: the fact that the names Samuel, Edward, and Ann occur within
the same family; and the fact the father is identified as a butcher. Thomas
Morton, writing in 1637, says that Samuel Fuller was the son of a butcher.
The name Matthew also occurs in this Redenhall Fuller family. The counter-evidence
is primarily that the ages for the Fullers appear to be too old, when
compared to their marriage dates, the ages of their spouses, and with
the births of their children.
Samuel Fuller's
1613 Leiden marriage record indicates he had been formerly married to
Alice Glascock; nothing is known of his first wife beyond her name. Most
Alice Glascock's are found in Essex, which would support a Fuller origin
in this region. His second wife, Agnes Carpenter, was the daughter of
Alexander Carpenter, and was baptized at Wrington, Somerset on 16 December
1593. His third wife, Bridget Lee, was accompanied by her mother Josephine
Lee at her marriage, and also had a brother Samuel living in Leiden.
Samuel Fuller
came on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife Bridget. She would
come later, on the ship Anne in 1623. He was the Colony's doctor, and
was a church deacon. His wife Bridget may have been the church's deaconess.
Samuel Fuller spent time helping the sick at Neumkeag (now Salem), in
1629. He himself became sick in the autumn of 1633, and died, as did a
number of other Plymouth residents.
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