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  1. Sarah Franklin Bache. One of the most popular women of her day in her native city was Sarah Franklin. She was born in 1744 the daughter of Benjamin and Deborah Read Franklin in the city of Philadelphia. Carefully educated by her father, she was said to be as broadly educated as any woman in the Colony. As a girl, she is said to have been plain ...

  2. To Sarah Bache. Franklin had been aware of the Society of the Cincinnati since at least mid-December, when Pierre-Charles L’Enfant arrived in Paris to deliver George Washington’s letters and begin the work of establishing a French branch. 8 A week after L’Enfant’s arrival, however, Franklin still knew nothing specific about the ...

  3. Bache, Sarah (1743–1808) American patriot. Born on September 11, 1743; died in 1808; only daughter of Benjamin Franklin and Deborah Read Rogers (his common-law wife); married Richard Bache (a Philadelphia merchant); children: eight.. On September 1, 1730, Benjamin Franklin "took to wife" Deborah Read, whose first husband had deserted her.Not wanting to be saddled with the departed husband's ...

  4. Sarah Franklin Bache. Sarah Franklin “Sally” Bache (September 11, 1744 – October 5, 1808) was the daughter of Benjamin Franklin and Deborah Read. She was a leader in relief work during the American Revolutionary War and frequently served as her father’s political hostess, as her mother had died in 1774. ==Early life and education==.

  5. 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. She had a great love of reading and music and was considered a skilled harpsichordist.

  6. Sarah (Sally) Franklin Bache. 1743 - 1808. Franklin's only daughter. She was raised almost exclusively by her mother during Franklin's prolonged absences while he served as a diplomat in England and France. When Franklin returned to Philadelphia at the end of his service, Sally served as his hostess and nurse until his death.