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  1. Sarah Franklin Bache and Esther de Berdt Reed, Sentiments of an American Women, June 12, 1780, Courtesy of the New York Historical Society. In the lists of rules for the collection of money, Bache and Reed made sure to note that the money would be distributed in whatever manner General George Washington thought was best.

  2. in the civic sector. Harkening back to the American Revolution, the WCEC inserted women as active participants in the founding of the nation and they used images of Martha Washington and Sarah Franklin Bache to raise funds and bolster their cause. Women, who had sacrificed as men

  3. 16 de feb. de 2024 · Sarah Franklin Bache (September 11, 1743 – October 5, 1808) was the daughter of Benjamin Franklin and Deborah Read. Known as "Sally" throughout her life, she was an ardent American patriot during the Revolutionary War through relief work (with Esther Reed ) and as her father's political hostess.

  4. Mary Slocumb, Ester Wake. The Women of the American Revolution. by Elizabeth F. Ellet. Sarah Bache. Martha Washington. →. Third Edition - 1849. "SARAH, the only daughter of Benjamin Franklin, was born at Philadelphia, on the eleventh of September, 1744. Of her early years no particulars can now be obtained; but from her father's appreciation ...

  5. From the guide to the Benjamin Franklin Bache papers, 1779-1793, 1779-1793, (American Philosophical Society) Sarah Franklin Bache was born in Philadelphia on 11 September 1743 to Benjamin Franklin and Deborah Read. Sarah, known as Sally throughout her life, had a typical education for a girl of her status in eighteenth-century Philadelphia.

  6. Letter to Sarah Bache. January 1, 1795 [American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia; Sarah Franklin Bache Papers B/B1245; the letter is dated January 1, 1794, but this is old style and actually refers to January 1, 1795], mentions her husband's satisfaction in knowing that the portraits were well received by members of the Bache family.