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Peter Folger (Nantucket settler)
View on WikipediaPeter Folger or Foulger (died 1690) was a poet and an interpreter of the American Indian language for the first settlers of Nantucket. He was instrumental in the colonization of Nantucket Island in the Massachusetts colony. He was the maternal grandfather of Benjamin Franklin.[1]
Key Information
Life
[edit]Peter Folger was born in England, the son of John Folger Jr. and Meribah Gibbs.[2] He left Norwich, Norfolk, England[2] for America in 1635, settling initially in Watertown, Massachusetts, and later moving to Martha's Vineyard,[2][3] where he worked as a teacher and surveyor.[2][4] His father, John, a widower, came to the colonies in 1636 and ultimately settled in Martha's Vineyard.[2]
In 1644, he married Mary Morrell, whom he met on the voyage from England.[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. He was hired by Governor Thomas Mayhew and his son Thomas Mayhew Jr. to convert the Native American population to Christianity, during which time he learned to speak the native language. He was a Baptist in faith, and as such was told not to visit with the Puritans on the mainland. Rev. Experience Mayhew, in a letter to John Gardner, Esquire, dated 1694, states that when Thomas Mayhew Jr. left for England in 1657, he left the care of his church and mission to Peter Folger.[5]
From time to time between 1659 and 1662, Folger journeyed to Nantucket in order to survey it for the proprietors.[6] He was an interpreter for Tristram Coffin. In 1663 Folger moved to Nantucket full-time, having been granted a half a share of land by the proprietors, where he was a surveyor, an Indian interpreter, and clerk in the courts.[6] He did, however, participate in an insurrection of the "half share men" against the larger land owners of the island, and was jailed for a period.[7]
Folger died at Nantucket, Massachusetts, in 1690 and is buried in the Founders Burial Ground.[8] His wife Mary Morrill Folger lived until 1704 and is also buried in the Founders Burial Ground.[8][9]
Works
[edit]- A Looking Glass for the Times, or the Former Spirit of New England Revived in this Generation (1675)
- A Denunciation of War
References
[edit]- ^ Franklin, Benjamin; Sparks, Jared; Temple, William; Franklin; Storm, G. F.; Andrews, Joseph (1856). The Life of Benjamin Franklin. Boston: Whitman, Niles, and Hall. p. 543.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Alexander Starbuck (June 2009). Nantucket Genealogies. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 740. ISBN 978-0-8063-5106-3.
- ^ Trent, William Peterfield; Benjamin Willis Wells (1903). Colonial Prose and Poetry. Thomas Y. Crowell & co. pp. 111.
peter folger.
- ^ a b New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol 16. Samuel G. Drake. 1862. pp. 269.
peter folger.
- ^ Cutter, William (1922). "American Biography: A New Cyclopedia, Volume 12".
- ^ a b Worron, Harriet B. (1881). "Trustum" and His Grandchildren. Published by the author. p. 36.
- ^ Kunitz, Stanley J.; Haycraft, Howard, eds. (1960). American Authors 1600-1900. New York: H.W. Wilson Company. p. 279.
- ^ a b "Nantucket Founders Burial Ground Information". Nantucket Historical Association. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
- ^ Jared Sparks (1844). The Works of Benjamin Franklin: Containing Several Political and Historical Tracts Not Included in Any Former Edition, and Many Letters, Official and Private, Not Hitherto Published; with Notes and a Life of the Author. C. Tappan. p. 543.
Sources
[edit]- The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 16. By New England Historic Genealogical Society
- American Marriages Before 1699 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, US: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1997. Original data: Clemens, William Montgomery. American Marriage Records Before 1699. Pompton Lakes, NJ, US: Biblio Co., 1926.
Peter Folger (Nantucket settler)
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Origins and Family Background
Peter Folger was born in 1617 in Norwich, Norfolk, England, the son of John Folger (c. 1590–1660) and Meribah Gibbs (c. 1595–after 1617).[7][8] He was reportedly the only child of this marriage, with limited records surviving about his parents' early lives beyond their residence in the Norwich area of East Anglia, a region known for its Puritan sympathies in the early 17th century.[4][9] John Folger's occupation remains undocumented in primary sources, though the family's relocation to colonial America suggests modest means tied to trade or artisan work common in Norfolk at the time.[10] In 1635, at age 18, Folger accompanied his father to Massachusetts Bay Colony aboard a ship from England, initially settling in Watertown before possible moves to Dedham or other early Puritan outposts.[8][10] Genealogical records indicate John Folger may have arrived as a widower, implying Meribah Gibbs had died in England prior to emigration, though exact dates for her death are unverified.[4] This migration aligned with the broader wave of Puritan families fleeing religious persecution under Archbishop William Laud, positioning the Folgers within the English dissenting tradition that shaped New England's founding communities.[1]Immigration and Early Settlement
Peter Folger, born in April 1617 near Norwich in East Anglia, England, to John Folger and Meribah Gibbs, immigrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1635 at the age of 18.[1] He sailed aboard the Abigail, departing England in July or September of that year under the command of his uncle, Captain John Gibbs, arriving in Boston amid the Great Migration of Puritans seeking religious freedom from the Church of England.[1] This voyage aligned with broader patterns of English migration, driven by economic pressures and Puritan dissent, with over 20,000 settlers arriving in New England between 1630 and 1640.[6] Upon arrival, Folger and his family initially resided briefly in Dedham, Massachusetts, before relocating to Watertown in 1639, where they worked in the gristmill owned by English merchant Israel Stoughton.[1] Watertown, founded in 1630 as one of the earliest inland settlements of the colony, provided opportunities for skilled labor in milling, reflecting the colony's emphasis on self-sufficient agrarian economies supported by water-powered infrastructure.[6] Folger's early activities there involved manual labor and adaptation to colonial life, including land grants and community integration under Puritan governance, though records indicate no immediate prominence beyond familial ties.[11] By the early 1640s, these experiences positioned him for further westward expansion, foreshadowing his later roles in island settlements.[1]Professional Roles in Colonial New England
Work in Martha's Vineyard
Peter Folger relocated to Martha's Vineyard around 1642, where he became a key assistant to Thomas Mayhew in colonial administration and missionary endeavors. He negotiated land rights with Wampanoag leaders on Mayhew's behalf that year, facilitating English settlement.[1] Folger supported himself through land surveying and trading, skills that aided in dividing and managing Vineyard properties amid interactions with Native inhabitants.[12] In education, Folger served as the first schoolmaster in Great Harbour (later Edgartown), appointed in 1652 and granted two acres near the schoolhouse on June 26 of that year.[1] Employed by Thomas Mayhew Jr. from 1656, he taught Wampanoag youths English, reading, writing, and Christian catechism, continuing the instruction after Mayhew Jr.'s departure for England in late 1657; he earned £20 annually for this role by 1659.[1][13] His efforts contributed to Wampanoag literacy initiatives, including learning the Wôpanâak language to support Bible translation and conversion efforts, such as the 1663 Up-Biblum.[12] Folger also held governance positions, appointed in 1653 with five others to oversee the Martha's Vineyard community and in 1655 with four others to arbitrate disputes, helping establish orderly colonial operations.[1] These roles underscored his multifaceted contributions to the island's early English infrastructure before his family's move to Nantucket in the early 1660s.Contributions to Nantucket Settlement
Peter Folger played a pivotal role in the initial acquisition of Nantucket Island by English settlers through his work as an interpreter of the Wampanoag language. In 1659, he accompanied the proprietors, including Thomas Macy, to negotiate the purchase from the Native American sachems Wanamoiet and Nickanoose, facilitating the transaction for £30 and two beaver hats.[1] His linguistic skills were essential for accurate communication, enabling the deed's execution on December 6, 1659, which laid the legal foundation for English settlement.[1] Folger's surveying expertise further advanced the settlement by delineating land for division among the proprietors. In 1660, he staked out initial lots, and by May 1661, he completed the comprehensive survey of the island, providing the proprietary framework for allocating shares and preventing disputes over boundaries.[1] He witnessed related land transfers in 1662, underscoring his ongoing involvement in proprietary affairs.[1] These efforts were critical for transforming the deed into practical habitation, as surveyed divisions allowed settlers to claim and develop specific parcels. In recognition of his services, the proprietors granted Folger a half share of land, including the Rogers Field lot, on July 4, 1663, along with accommodations for his trade skills.[1] He relocated his family from Martha's Vineyard to Nantucket that year, becoming one of the earliest permanent residents and contributing to population establishment.[14] By 1666, Folger was appointed to operate the island's first gristmill at Wesco Pond, setting a toll of two quarts per bushel of corn ground, which supported agricultural processing and economic self-sufficiency for the nascent community.[14] His multifaceted roles as surveyor, interpreter, miller, and settler thus bridged negotiation, division, and infrastructure development essential to Nantucket's founding.[1][14]Surveying, Teaching, and Mill Operations
Folger conducted surveys of Nantucket Island on behalf of its proprietors between 1659 and 1662, mapping the land to facilitate division and settlement planning.[9][15] These efforts positioned him as a key technical contributor to the island's early development, leveraging his skills as a surveyor honed in Martha's Vineyard.[12] Upon relocating to Nantucket in 1663, Folger served as the island's first schoolmaster, establishing education for the nascent English community.[1] The schoolhouse was situated on Old Mill Path near Slough Hill, where he instructed settlers in reading, writing, and basic subjects, drawing on prior experience teaching Native Americans and English pupils on Martha's Vineyard, for which he received an annual salary of £20 by 1659.[1][16] Folger also managed grist mill operations on Nantucket, overseeing facilities critical for processing corn into meal amid limited resources. Between 1666 and 1676, he was placed in charge of mills at Lily Pond, and in 1672 the town appointed him to run a specific grist mill with a fixed toll of two quarts per bushel ground.[1][17] This role, compensated through tolls rather than wages, supported the community's self-sufficiency by enabling efficient grain milling, though early mills relied on wind or water power adapted to the island's environment.[14]Interactions with Native Americans
Language Interpretation and Diplomacy
Peter Folger acquired proficiency in the Wôpanâak language, spoken by the Wampanoag people, during his residence on Martha's Vineyard, where he was employed by Thomas Mayhew Jr. in 1656 to instruct Wampanoag youths in English, necessitating bilingual capabilities for effective teaching.[1] This linguistic skill positioned him as a key interpreter for English settlers engaging with Native American leaders.[12] In 1659, Folger accompanied Tristram Coffin and other representatives from Martha's Vineyard to Nantucket, serving as interpreter during negotiations with Wampanoag sachems Wanamoiet, Tackanash, and Ashawonks for the island's purchase.[1] The agreement, finalized for £30 and two beaver hats, was witnessed by Folger and the younger Wauwinet, son of sachem Nickanoose, enabling peaceful English settlement by facilitating clear communication and mutual understanding of terms.[18] His role extended to subsequent visits in 1660–1662, where he assisted in surveying lots and witnessing additional land transfers, further solidifying diplomatic ties.[1] Folger's interpretive services proved crucial in averting conflict during a 1665 incident on Nantucket, when he successfully calmed sachem Metacomet (later known as King Philip) amid rising tensions, preventing escalation between settlers and Wampanoag groups.[1] Beyond direct negotiations, his contributions to Wampanoag literacy efforts, including collaboration on the 1663 Up-Biblum—the first Bible portion translated into a Native North American language—enhanced cross-cultural exchange and long-term diplomatic relations by promoting shared religious and educational frameworks.[12] These activities underscored Folger's pragmatic approach to intercultural diplomacy, prioritizing verifiable agreements over ideological impositions.Missionary Activities and Cultural Exchange
Peter Folger engaged in missionary efforts among the Wampanoag primarily on Martha's Vineyard during the 1640s and 1650s, collaborating with Thomas Mayhew Jr. to convert Native Americans to Christianity through a systematic approach: acquiring fluency in the Wôpanâak language, developing an alphabet, translating religious texts, and promoting literacy.[12] By 1651, he taught at an Indian school on the island, instructing Wampanoag students in literacy and Puritan doctrine while preaching rebaptism consistent with his emerging Baptist views.[19] His contributions extended to the Up-Biblum, the first Bible translated into a Native American language (Wôpanâak) and published in Cambridge in 1663, supported by at least 1,000 copies that enabled high literacy rates among Wampanoag converts, some of whom became instructors and ministers themselves.[12] Folger's missionary work intersected with cultural exchange via his role as interpreter, facilitating dialogue that introduced Christian practices such as new funeral rites observed by 1650 and English-style education, while adapting religious instruction to local contexts through Native bilingual leaders like Hiacoomes and John Tackanash.[20] Upon relocating to Nantucket in 1659–1660, he continued these efforts alongside surveying and land negotiations, using his language skills to mediate with sachems including Wanackmamack and Nickanoose, thereby promoting harmony between settlers and Natives.[19] During King Philip's War in 1675, his established relationships averted violence on Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard, as he interpreted warnings and maintained peace amid broader regional conflict.[20] These interactions transcended evangelism; Folger served as an agent for English proprietors in land transfers, yet his diplomacy—such as dissuading sachem Philip from executing settler John Gibbs in 1665—fostered mutual reliance, with Wampanoag communities revering him for equitable dealings that preserved stability.[21] His departure from formal Vineyard missions in 1662, following rejection of his Anabaptist rebaptism practices by Thomas Mayhew Sr. after Jr.'s 1657 death, shifted focus toward practical intercultural brokerage on Nantucket, blending religious tolerance with pragmatic exchange.[20]Religious Development
Puritan Influences and Initial Beliefs
Peter Folger, born around 1617 in the Diss area of Norfolk, England, grew up in a Protestant environment shaped by non-conformist influences classified by historians as Puritan, emphasizing scriptural authority and moral reform within the Church of England. His family's relocation to Norwich, a hub of Puritan activity, exposed him to devotional practices that prioritized covenant theology and communal piety, common among emigrants seeking to escape perceived Anglican laxity. In 1635, at age 18, Folger accompanied his father John on the Puritan migration to Massachusetts Bay Colony, joining thousands fleeing religious persecution under Archbishop Laud to establish a "city upon a hill" governed by biblical law and congregational church discipline.[22][1][6] Upon arrival, Folger settled in the Puritan stronghold of the Bay Colony, where adherence to orthodox Calvinist doctrines—such as predestination, infant baptism, and strict Sabbath observance—was enforced through church covenants and civil magistrates. He initially conformed to these beliefs, participating in the colony's theocratic society as a freeman and contributor to communal enterprises, which required church membership for full civic rights. By the early 1640s, Folger relocated to Martha's Vineyard under the patronage of Thomas Mayhew Jr., a Puritan missionary commissioned by the colony to evangelize Native Americans, reflecting his alignment with the Puritan imperative to extend "praying towns" and convert indigenous peoples to Congregationalist Christianity. As Mayhew's assistant, interpreter, and overseer, Folger helped translate scriptures into Wampanoag and facilitated baptisms, embodying the Puritan fusion of civil authority and religious mission aimed at creating godly societies.[12][3] Folger's early roles as schoolmaster in Edgartown from 1659, teaching English and likely basic Puritan catechism to both settlers and Natives, further underscored his initial commitment to the colony's educational mandate for moral and doctrinal instruction. This period of service, compensated at £20 annually, integrated him into the Puritan hierarchy's efforts to inculcate beliefs in divine sovereignty and personal regeneration, though his later writings critiqued aspects of this orthodoxy. Until encounters in the 1660s prompted reevaluation, Folger's actions and associations indicate a foundational adherence to Puritan soteriology and ecclesiology, shaped by the colony's coercive conformity rather than innate conviction alone.[1][12]Encounter with Roger Williams and Quaker Sympathies
In 1662, Peter Folger grew dissatisfied with the rigid Puritan orthodoxy prevailing in Massachusetts Bay Colony and Martha's Vineyard, where he had served as a schoolmaster and assistant to missionary Thomas Mayhew Jr. This discomfort prompted him to seek out the more tolerant religious environment of Rhode Island, where Roger Williams promoted separation of church and state and welcomed dissenters including Baptists, Seekers, and Quakers. Folger traveled there, repudiating Mayhew's teachings in favor of Williams' emphasis on individual conscience and opposition to infant baptism, aligning himself with Baptist principles that rejected pedobaptism as unscriptural.[1][23][3] Folger's ideological encounter with Williams' views—gained through visits to Newport and Portsmouth—led him to preach Anabaptist doctrines openly, contributing to tensions that culminated in his departure from Martha's Vineyard; on December 3, 1662, he sold his property there and relocated his family to Rhode Island before settling on Nantucket in 1663. While no records confirm a personal meeting between Folger and Williams, the latter's 1643 Key into the Language of America and advocacy for Native American rights resonated with Folger's own experiences as an interpreter, fostering a shared commitment to religious liberty amid colonial persecutions. This shift marked Folger's evolution from Puritan conformity toward a broader tolerationism, influencing his later roles in Nantucket's founding community.[1][24][25] Folger's sympathies for Quakers emerged prominently during the 1670s, as New England authorities intensified persecution of Friends for refusing oaths, tithes, and military service. In 1676, amid King Philip's War, he composed the 428-line poem A Looking Glass for the Times, or the Former Spirit of New-England Revived in this Generation, decrying the "bloody spirit" of intolerance and attributing colonial misfortunes to the whipping, fining, and imprisonment of Quakers and other nonconformists. Published while Folger was briefly imprisoned on Nantucket for his dissenting views, the work urged rulers to emulate biblical mercy rather than Old Testament severity, explicitly defending Quaker pacifism and inner light theology as non-seditious. Though Folger identified primarily as Baptist and did not formally join the Society of Friends—some accounts speculate a late-life conversion around 1680 without firm evidence—his advocacy helped lay groundwork for Quaker dominance on Nantucket by the 1700s, as his tolerance contrasted with mainland Puritanism.[1][26]Writings and Defense of Religious Tolerance
Peter Folger authored A Looking Glass for the Times, or the Former Spirit of New-England Revived in This Generation in 1676, a poetic tract in verse form that condemned the Puritan authorities' persecution of Quakers through whippings, banishments, and executions.[9] Written from Nantucket, where Folger had settled to escape religious strife, the pamphlet framed such intolerance as a revival of Old World zealotry, arguing it invited divine judgment on the colonies in the form of Native American conflicts and other afflictions.[27] [28] Folger, identifying as a Baptist rather than a Quaker, positioned his defense as a call for liberty of conscience, critiquing the "college men"—Harvard-trained clergy—as self-serving and doctrinally rigid preachers unfit to impose uniformity.[21] To bolster his case, Folger appended transcripts of reports from the Lords of the Committee for Trade and Plantations, along with King Charles II's 1661 order halting Quaker executions and mandating fair trials, highlighting how New England magistrates defied royal directives.[29] This integration of moral jeremiad with legal evidence underscored the persecutions' illegality under English law, appealing to colonists' loyalty to the crown amid tensions over colonial autonomy. The tract, initially shared in manuscript before print, echoed Roger Williams' separatist principles but emphasized practical consequences of intolerance, influencing Nantucket's later emergence as a haven for Quaker settlers seeking refuge from Massachusetts Bay's orthodoxy.[28] Folger's work stands as an early colonial voice prioritizing empirical observation of persecution's harms over confessional purity.Family and Descendants
Marriage and Children
Peter Folger married Mary Morrell, whom he met during the transatlantic voyage from England and whose indenture he purchased for £20 to obtain her freedom, circa 1644 in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.[6] The couple resided initially on Martha's Vineyard, where eight of their nine children were born, before relocating to Nantucket in 1663 as part of the island's early settlement.[6] [1] Their youngest child, Abiah Folger (born August 15, 1667), married Josiah Franklin in 1689 and bore ten children, including Benjamin Franklin.[1] The nine children of Peter Folger and Mary Morrell were:| Name | Birth Year (Location) | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| Joanna Folger | 1645 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married John Coleman in 1666; died May 18, 1719, Nantucket; eight children. |
| Bethia Folger | 1646 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married John Barnard in 1668; both drowned June 6, 1669; no children. |
| Dorcas Folger | 1647 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married Joseph Pratt in 1675; died December 24, 1712, Charlestown; nine children. |
| Eleazar Folger | 1648 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married Sarah Gardner in 1671; died 1716, Boston; seven children. |
| Bethshua Folger | 1655 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married Joseph Pope in 1679; died 1720, Nantucket; eight children. |
| Patience Folger | 1657 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married Ebenezer Harker and later James Gardner; died March 17, 1716, Nantucket; two children. |
| John Folger | 1659 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married Mary Barnard in 1688; died August 23, 1732, Nantucket; nine children. |
| Experience Folger | 1661 (Martha's Vineyard) | Married John Swain Jr. in 1687; died June 4, 1739, Nantucket; nine children. |
| Abiah Folger | 1667 (Nantucket) | Married Josiah Franklin in 1689; died May 18, 1752, Boston; ten children, including Benjamin Franklin. |
