1625 - 1695 (70 years)
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Name |
William Fuller |
Title |
Captain |
Birth |
30 Jun 1625 |
Newport, Isle of Wight, Virginia, USA |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
10 Jul 1695 |
Saint Andrews, Berkeley, South Carolina, USA |
Person ID |
I23337 |
Master |
Last Modified |
13 Apr 2015 |
Father |
Thomas Fuller, b. 22 Jun 1575, Deal, Kent, England d. 20 May 1659, Deal, Kent, England (Age 83 years) |
Relationship |
Natural |
Mother |
Audrey Anne Gylman Giles, b. 1577, Redenhall, Norfolk, England d. 30 May 1659, Redenhall, Norfolk, England (Age 82 years) |
Relationship |
Natural |
Marriage |
22 Jan 1599 |
Harlston, Norfolk, England |
Family ID |
F6138 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family |
Sarah Martiau, b. Nov 1629, , Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA d. 14 Mar 1695, Saint Andrews, Berkeley, South Carolina, USA (Age 65 years) |
Children |
+ | 1. Ezekiel Fuller, b. 1653, Newport, Isle of Wight, Virginia, USA d. 24 Jun 1723, Newport, Isle of Wight, Virginia, USA (Age 70 years) |
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Family ID |
F6124 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
13 Apr 2015 |
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Notes |
- Captain William Fuller of the Severn. Governor of Maryland In 1654, he repealed the Tole ration Act and became Member of the Great Council and a Proprietor's deputy (assigned land grants). He was the ranking officer in Oliver Cromwell's Roundhead Army, Commander in Chief in Indian Wars and brought settlers to a colony in South Carolina.
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- http://www.geni.com/people/Capt-William-Fuller-Colonial-Gov-of- Maryland/6000000001532096436?through=6000000001735727635
The new governor of Maryland, William Fuller, did away with the Toleration Act which gave Catholics the right to practice their religion, and removed Lord Baltimore from authority
From EARLY SOUTHERN FULLERS by Theodore Albert Fuller...
"Capt. William Fuller, ranking officer in Oliver Cromwell's roundhead army and subsequent Governor of Maryland, was one of five Puritans on committee to make a treaty with the Susquehannah Indians on 5Jul1652 for Isle of Wight Co., VA."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_S evern
Battle of the Severn Commanders and leaders: Captain William Fuller - William Stone
Casualties and losses: 2 killed - 17 killed 32 wounded
The Battle of the Severn was a skirmish fought on March 25, 1655, on the Severn River at Horn Point, across Spa Creek from Annapolis, Maryland, in what at that time was referred to as "Providence", in what is now the neighborhood of Eastport. The capital of Maryland was moved from St. Mary's to Ann Arundel Town in 1694,[2] and Ann Arundel Town name was changed to Annapolis in 1695.[3] It was an extension of the conflicts that formed the English Civil War,[4] pitting the forces of Puritan settlers against forces aligned with Lord Baltimore, Lord Proprietor of the colony of Maryland at the time. It has been suggested by Radmila May that this was the last battle of the English Civil War.[5]
http://petersheritage.com/uploads/william_fuller_info.pdf
William Fuller, founder of the Fuller family of St. Andrew’s Parish on Ashley River in South Carolina, was born presumably in England about 1625 or earlier. He arrived in Virginia sometime in the late 1640s to 1650. In 1651, he moved into Maryland to join a colony of Puritans, who settled there two years earlier.
In his book, Nicolas Martiau, The Adventurous Huguenot, John Baer Stoudt states that William Fuller had been the surveyor for the Province of Virginia. However, no reference is given for this information, and no records in Virginia have been found to confirm it.
William was a Captain and married Sarah Martiau, youngest daughter of Captain Nicolas Martiau (1592-1657) and his wife, Jane of York County, Virginia. William Fuller married Sarah about 1651 and took her with him to Maryland.
Source: Captain William Fuller of Maryland and South Carolina and his Descendants by Virginia Fripp Shaffer, Southern Historical Press Inc., 2002,
1654 The new governor of Maryland, William Fuller, does away with the Toleration Act which gave Catholics the right to practice their religion and removes Lord Baltimore from authority.
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