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  1. Richard Bache (September 12, 1737 – April 17, 1811), born in Settle, West Riding of Yorkshire, England, immigrated to Philadelphia, in the colony of Pennsylvania, where he was a businessman, a marine insurance underwriter, and later served as Postmaster-General of the American Post Office. He also was the son-in-law of Benjamin ...

  2. 30 de oct. de 2009 · Richard Bache claims a modest niche in history thanks to. his role as Benjamin Franklin's son-in-law. It has generally. >>- been assumed that the English-born Bache arrived in. Philadelphia for the first time in the autumn of 1765,1 became en. gaged to Peggy Ross the following year, was bequeathed by that young lady on her deathbed to Sally ...

  3. Richard Franklin Bache, also known as Richard Bache Jr. (1784–1848), was a military and political official in the Republic and state of Texas. He assisted in drafting the Texas Constitution of 1845, the first of its five state constitutions.

  4. 16 de oct. de 2019 · Anita Merritt. Richard Bache with his mother Margaret, eldest daughter Alex and dogs Hugo, Maisie and Jess (Image: Alex Bache) A retired Crediton PE teacher who suffered with epilepsy...

    • Anita Merritt
  5. 16 de abr. de 2023 · However, one of the key figures of that era, Benjamin Franklin, still had an impact on Texas and its own independence decades later. Richard Bache, Jr., Franklin’s grandson, fought in the Texas...

  6. Richard Bache later served as a director of Robert Morris’ Bank of North America, became involved in Benjamin Franklin’s Society for Political Inquiries, and handled many of the Franklin family affairs after Benjamin’s death in 1790. Richard Bache retired to his farm, which he named “Settle,” on the banks of the Delaware River.

  7. 12 de mar. de 2002 · “Richard Bache to Thomas Jefferson, 3 January 1818,” Founders Online, National Archives, https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/03-12-02-0256-0001. [Original source: The Papers of Thomas Jefferson , Retirement Series, vol. 12, 1 September 1817 to 21 April 1818 , ed. J. Jefferson Looney.