Samuel Fuller

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Samuel Fuller

Birth
Redenhall, South Norfolk District, Norfolk, England
Death
31 Oct 1683 (aged 75)
Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Came to Plymouth on the Mayflower in 1620 with his parents, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Fuller, and his uncle Dr. Samuel Fuller.


Born about 1608 as "Samuel Fuller, Jr." he is the third person in the eighth company (and in the household of his uncle Samuel Fuller) in the 1627 Plymouth division of cattle; "Sammell Fowller" appears in the 1633 list of Plymouth freemen, just ahead of those admitted on 1 Jan 1634/5; assessed 9s. in the Plymouth tax list of 27 Mar 1634; m. Scituate 8 Apr 1633 Jane Lothrop, daughter of Rev. JOHN LOTHROP [1635, Scituate].

Source: Anderson's The Mayflower Migration.


Burial date and locale unknown


This SAMUEL FULLER is not the same as the physician SAMUEL FULLER who was his uncle. The uncle, physician SAMUEL FULLER, died in a 1633 smallpox epidemic and has a seperate burial listing at Burial Hill, Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Physician SAMUEL FULLER also had a son REV. SAMUEL FULLER who is buried at Nemasket Hill Cemetery, Middleborough, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.


Physician SAMUEL FULLER traveled on the Mayflower with his brother, Edward Fuller and Edward's wife and their son Samuel. He was also accompanied by his servant, William Butten who died at sea, 6 November 1620.


Samuel was baptized at Redenhall, Norfolk, England, 20 January 1580, the son of Robert and Sarah (Dunkhorn) Fuller. He died at Plymouth between 30 July and 28 October 1633 during the general sickness that swept through the Plymouth area in 1633 and 1634.


Samuel married his first wife place and date unknown; he was the widower of Alice Glascock, when he married 2) at Leiden, 24 April 1613, Agnes Carpenter. He was the widow of Anna Carpenter when he married 3) at Leiden, 27 May 1617, Bridget Lee. Bridget came to Plymouth in 1623 aboard the Anne.


Samuel Fuller was a signer of the Mayflower Compact, signed on 11 November 1620, while the ship was at Provincetown, at the tip of Cape Cod. In the 1623 land division, he received two acres of land, for himself and his servant. Bridget Fuller received one acre as a passenger of the Anne. In the 1627 cattle division, Samuel is joined by wife Bridget and nephew, Samuel Fuller.


Samuel Fuller was indispensable as a self-taught physician not just to those at Plymouth, but to surrounding areas including Salem and Charlestown. His death in 1633 was a great blow to those in Plymouth; Bradford states that he died "after he had much helped others…being a deacon of the church, a man godly and forward to do good."


SOURCES:

Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Samuel Fuller, by Katharine W. Radasch and Arthur H. Radasch; rev. by Margaret H. Stover and Robert S. Wakefield, vol. 10. Plymouth, 2013.


Mayflower Passenger References, (from contemporary records and scholarly journals), by Susan E. Roser. 2011. pp. 234-42.


Descendants of Edward or Samuel Fuller and invited to join The Fuller Society.

Came to Plymouth on the Mayflower in 1620 with his parents, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Fuller, and his uncle Dr. Samuel Fuller.


Born about 1608 as "Samuel Fuller, Jr." he is the third person in the eighth company (and in the household of his uncle Samuel Fuller) in the 1627 Plymouth division of cattle; "Sammell Fowller" appears in the 1633 list of Plymouth freemen, just ahead of those admitted on 1 Jan 1634/5; assessed 9s. in the Plymouth tax list of 27 Mar 1634; m. Scituate 8 Apr 1633 Jane Lothrop, daughter of Rev. JOHN LOTHROP [1635, Scituate].

Source: Anderson's The Mayflower Migration.


Burial date and locale unknown


This SAMUEL FULLER is not the same as the physician SAMUEL FULLER who was his uncle. The uncle, physician SAMUEL FULLER, died in a 1633 smallpox epidemic and has a seperate burial listing at Burial Hill, Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Physician SAMUEL FULLER also had a son REV. SAMUEL FULLER who is buried at Nemasket Hill Cemetery, Middleborough, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.


Physician SAMUEL FULLER traveled on the Mayflower with his brother, Edward Fuller and Edward's wife and their son Samuel. He was also accompanied by his servant, William Butten who died at sea, 6 November 1620.


Samuel was baptized at Redenhall, Norfolk, England, 20 January 1580, the son of Robert and Sarah (Dunkhorn) Fuller. He died at Plymouth between 30 July and 28 October 1633 during the general sickness that swept through the Plymouth area in 1633 and 1634.


Samuel married his first wife place and date unknown; he was the widower of Alice Glascock, when he married 2) at Leiden, 24 April 1613, Agnes Carpenter. He was the widow of Anna Carpenter when he married 3) at Leiden, 27 May 1617, Bridget Lee. Bridget came to Plymouth in 1623 aboard the Anne.


Samuel Fuller was a signer of the Mayflower Compact, signed on 11 November 1620, while the ship was at Provincetown, at the tip of Cape Cod. In the 1623 land division, he received two acres of land, for himself and his servant. Bridget Fuller received one acre as a passenger of the Anne. In the 1627 cattle division, Samuel is joined by wife Bridget and nephew, Samuel Fuller.


Samuel Fuller was indispensable as a self-taught physician not just to those at Plymouth, but to surrounding areas including Salem and Charlestown. His death in 1633 was a great blow to those in Plymouth; Bradford states that he died "after he had much helped others…being a deacon of the church, a man godly and forward to do good."


SOURCES:

Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Samuel Fuller, by Katharine W. Radasch and Arthur H. Radasch; rev. by Margaret H. Stover and Robert S. Wakefield, vol. 10. Plymouth, 2013.


Mayflower Passenger References, (from contemporary records and scholarly journals), by Susan E. Roser. 2011. pp. 234-42.


Descendants of Edward or Samuel Fuller and invited to join The Fuller Society.

Gravesite Details

Burial date and locale unknown, from the memorial notes