Samuel Peters (clergyman)

Samuel Peters
Portrait drawing of Samuel Peters, facing left
Samuel Peters, c. 1700s
Born
Samuel Andrew Peters

(1735-12-01)December 1, 1735
DiedApril 19, 1826(1826-04-19) (aged 90)
EducationYale College
Spouses
Hannah Owen
(m. 1760⁠–⁠1765)
Abigail Gilbert
(m. 1769⁠–⁠1769)
Mary Birdseye
(m. 1773⁠–⁠1774)
Children4
ReligionAnglicanism
ChurchSt. Peter's Church, Hebron, Connecticut

Samuel Andrew Peters (December 1, 1735 – April 19, 1826) was a Connecticut Anglican clergyman and historian. Born in 1735 in Hebron, Connecticut, he graduated from Yale College and became the local minister at St. Peter's Church in the town. Politically, he was a loyalist who was driven out of Hebron by the Sons of Liberty. He moved to England in response to that. In 1787, he tried to pay off his debts by selling his enslaved Africans, Cesar and Lowis. Twice prevented from doing so by the local townsmen, he relented. In 1805, he moved to New York City to pursue a property claim in the area that later became Minneapolis, but that venture failed. He returned to New York and died in poverty there on April 19, 1826.


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