For the member of the Pennsylvania Senate, see Samuel Leas Carpenter. For the mayor of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, see Samuel Carpenter (mayor).
Samuel Carpenter
Born
(1649-11-04)4 November 1649
Horsham, Sussex, England
Died
10 April 1714(1714-04-10) (aged 64)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, British America
Resting place
Arch Street (Quakers) Burial Ground, Fourth and Arch Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 39°57′7.2″N75°8′50.17″W / 39.952000°N 75.1472694°W / 39.952000; -75.1472694
Occupation
Merchant
Years active
1671–1714
Known for
Deputy Governor of Philadelphia, First Treasurer of Pennsylvania
Spouse
Hannah Hardiman
Parent(s)
John Carpenter, of Horsham & Sarah
Signature
Samuel Carpenter (4 November 1649 – 10 April 1714) was a Deputy Governor of colonial Pennsylvania. He signed the historic document "The Declaration of Fealty, Christian Belief and Test" dated 10 September 1695; the original is in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Samuel was also called the "First Treasurer" of Pennsylvania, and was a partner and friend of proprietor William Penn.
SamuelCarpenter (4 November 1649 – 10 April 1714) was a Deputy Governor of colonial Pennsylvania. He signed the historic document "The Declaration of...
Samuel Leas Carpenter was an American politician from Pennsylvania who served in the Pennsylvania State Senate, representing the 18th district from 1835...
John Howard Carpenter (born January 16, 1948) is an American filmmaker, composer, and actor. Most commonly associated with horror, action, and science...
Descendants." Edward Carpenter & his son, Gen. Louis H. Carpenter (1912). "SamuelCarpenter and his Descendants". SamuelCarpenter and his Descendants...
by settler Joshua Carpenter, brother of SamuelCarpenter, a Quaker merchant who made a fortune trading in Barbados. Joshua Carpenter built the Tun on the...
patent of 1664 Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Governors, ed. (1916). "SamuelCarpenter". Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Governors, Volume 1. pp. 180–181...
Governor Carpenter may refer to: Cyrus C. Carpenter (1829–1898), 8th Governor of Iowa SamuelCarpenter (1649–1714), Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania from...
patent of 1664 Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Governors, ed. (1916). "SamuelCarpenter". Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Governors, Volume 1. pp. 180–181...
on the NRHP in Jackson County Oregon SamuelCarpenter's "Slate Roof House", Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Carpenter House (Plano, Texas), a historic house...
until its demolition in 1867. Built for Barbadian Quaker merchant SamuelCarpenter, the house occupied a small hill overlooking the Delaware River. It...
Gibbes, Thomas Smith and Joseph Blake, Pennsylvania deputy governor SamuelCarpenter, and the American revolutionary and lieutenant governor of South Carolina...
Industrial Art and the New York Art Students League. Carpenter was a descendant of SamuelCarpenter, a close associate of William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania...
Samuel Alexander Mudd Sr. (December 20, 1833 – January 10, 1883) was an American physician who was imprisoned for conspiring with John Wilkes Booth concerning...
wine. In the 1836 padrón or census of Los Angeles, he was listed as SamuelCarpenter and was one of fifty foreigners living in the pueblo. Early California...
Parish - Bevis Passenger SamuelCarpenter - Chr. 1 March 1636/1637 d. 20 April 1637 both in Shalbourne Parish. SamuelCarpenter - b. abt. 1638 of, Weymouth...
Term Party SamuelCarpenter 1704–1710, 1711–1713 David Rittenhouse 1777–1789 Christian Febiger 1789–1797 Peter Baynton 1797–1801 Jacob Carpenter 1801–1802...
2nd Duke of Richmond, son of James Stewart (d. 1660) November 4 – SamuelCarpenter, Deputy Governor of colonial Pennsylvania (d. 1714) November 24 – John...
writer. SamuelCarpenter (1649–1714), First Treasurer and Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania. Born in 1649 in Horsham. His father was John Carpenter, the Sheriff...
Frank Carlucci, U.S. Secretary of Defense under Ronald Reagan—Scranton SamuelCarpenter, first Treasurer 1704, Deputy Governor to William Penn—Philadelphia...