Abiah Folger

Abiah Folger Franklin (August 15, 1667 May 18, 1752) was the mother of Benjamin Franklin, a Founding Father of the United States.

Abiah Folger
BornAugust 15, 1667
DiedMay 18, 1752 (Aged 84)
Resting placeGranary Burying Ground
Known forMother of Benjamin Franklin
Spouse(s)Josiah Franklin
Children10 children, including Benjamin, James, and Jane

Biography

Abiah Folger was born on Madaket Road in Nantucket, Massachusetts, on August 15, 1667, to Peter Folger, a miller and schoolteacher, and his wife, Mary Morrell Folger, a former indentured servant.[1][2]:14 Her father Peter Folger was descended from reformist Flemish Protestants who had fled to England in the sixteenth century, and been among the first to flee to Massachusetts for religious freedom, in 1635, when King Charles I of England began persecuting Puritans.[2]:13 Later, her father Peter became a convert to Baptist Christianity, and Abhiah 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.[2]:14 Folger married Boston candle-maker and widower Josiah Franklin and they had 10 children. She raised her children with the Presbyterian religious tradition.[3] Abiah and Josiah's children included John (born 1690), Peter (1692), Mary (1694), James (1696), Sarah (1699), Ebenezer (1701), a son who died young (1703), Benjamin (1706), Lydia (1708), and Jane (1712).[2]:15

Abiah Folger Franklin was an early supporter of her son Benjamin's career but not actively involved in politics.[4] She disapproved of her son's membership to Freemasonry. Benjamin Franklin described his mother as “a discreet and virtuous woman” with “an excellent constitution."

The very abbreviated two-sentence description Abiah Folger Franklin in Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography has been the focus of recent scholarship.[5] Matthew Garrett wrote that "the Autobiography is perhaps the finest example within the modern narrative tradition of a text that habitually compresses major characters - those, that is, who play integral and significant roles within the plot - into minor players. Throughout the Autobiography, Franklin produces this narrative in order to produce himself.... But even by the standards Franklin sets in the rest of the Autobiography, his mother's dimunition within the narrative discourse is extreme."[5]:520–521 He concludes that "Abiah's depiction corresponds to a repertoire of socially normative behavior, the nurturing role of mothers, that cannot be assimilated to Benjamin Franklin's representation of individual incentive in nearly every other sentence of his narrative.... she countenances no excuses for the narrative into which her two sentences arrive like a message from another world."[5]:535–536

Relations

Folger's sister Bethshua Folger Pope was an active and theatric participant in the events surrounding the Salem witch trials. Bethshua suffered "hysterical blindness" and convulsions, and in the middle of one trial she threw a shoe at an accused person’s head. Her accusations contributed to the death-sentence of at least one convicted witch, Martha Corey. As a result, some popular dramatizations of the Salem trials have included Abiah as a character.

Legacy

In 1898, the Daughters of the American Revolution established the Abiah Folger Franklin Chapter in Nantucket.

There is a monument with flowers growing in it to honor Folger on the right side of Madaket Road at the site of the Folger Farm, now owned by the Nantucket Historical Association.[1]

A fictionalized character of Folger appeared in the fourth episode of Voyagers! titled "Agents of Satan," where the central characters prevented Folger from being hanged during the Salem witch trials.[6]

Folger was portrayed in a 2018 episode of the TV series Timeless titled "The Salem Witch Hunt."

References

  1. "abiah-franklin". www.massdar.org. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  2. Isaacson, Walter (2004). Benjamin Franklin: An American Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-5807-4.
  3. "Timeline (1657-1719) - The Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary". www.benfranklin300.org. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  4. "Founders Online: Abiah Franklin to Benjamin and Deborah Franklin, 14 October 1751". founders.archives.gov. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  5. Garrett, Matthew (2013). "The self-made son: Social competition and the vanishing mother in Franklin's "autobiography"". ELH. 80 (2): 519–542. ISSN 0013-8304.
  6. "Episode Guide | Voyagers Guidebook". voyagersguidebook. Retrieved March 29, 2019.

Further reading

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