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  1. Samuel Michael Fuller was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, of Jewish parents, Rebecca (née Baum) and Benjamin Fuller. [4] His father died in 1923 when Samuel was 11. After immigrating to the United States, the family's surname was changed from Rabinovitch to Fuller, a name possibly inspired by Samuel Fuller (Pilgrim), a doctor who arrived in America on the Mayflow

    • Who Was Samuel Fuller?
    • The Voyage and Time in Plymouth Colony
    • Samuel Fuller's Death and Legacy

    Samuel Fuller is believed to have been born in around 1580 in Redenhall, Norfolk, to Robert Fuller and Sarah Dunthorne. He also had a brother, Edward Fuller, who travelled with him on the Mayflower. Fuller is said to have wed Alice Glascock in around 1605, before marrying his second wife, Agnes Carpenter, in 1613 in Leiden, Holland. Agnes sadly die...

    Samuel Fuller boarded the Mayflower with his servant, William Butten, leaving his wife, Bridget, behind in Leiden. Fuller's plan was to wait until the conditions in Plymouth Colony were better suited to families - a decision that undoubtedly saved Bridget's life. Among the passengers was his brother, Edward, who made the trip with his wife and a so...

    In 1629 / 1630, Fuller was sent to assist the colonists of Salem and Charlestown who were sick and also needed help in organising their local Church. A few years later, Fuller himself fell ill with the sickness ("infectious fever") that had quickly spread throughout Plymouth Colony. A Plymouth resident named Nathaniel Morton wrote in his New Englan...

  2. Samuel Fuller has been generally identified as the son of Robert Fuller, baptized on 20 January 1580/1 at Redenhall, Norfolk. The identification is based upon circumstantial evidence only: the fact that the names Samuel, Edward, and Ann occur within the same family; and the fact the father is identified as a butcher.

  3. "Samuel Fuller has been generally identified as the son of Robert Fuller, baptized on 20 January 1580 at Redenhall, Norfolk. However, a number of genealogical scholars and Mayflower researchers, including Robert S. Wakefield, Robert Sherman, Robert Leigh Ward, Robert C. Anderson, Eugene Stratton, Leslie Mahler, and others, have all questioned the identification over the past couple of decades.

  4. Samuel Fuller, A Third Face. Between 1948 and 1989, the World War II veteran turned Hollywood writer-producer-director Samuel Fuller made twenty-three feature films. Despite a long list of admirers—including fellow filmmakers François Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard, Steven Spielberg and Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino and Jim Jarmusch ...

  5. Samuel’s Uncle Samuel. When young Samuel's parents both died in the wintery months following the Pilgrims' disembarking on the shores of New England, the highly regarded and compassionate doctor, Samuel Fuller, his uncle, became young Samuel's guardian. Uncle Samuel's comfort in grief and his example of self-giving over the following years ...

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  7. Nov 12, 2019 · The Big Red One is an enduring monument to Samuel Fuller, the writer, soldier, raconteur, and prodigal filmmaker who virtually invented the now familiar form of the war-film-as-memoir. Borrowed later by such movies as Platoon and Jarhead , The Big Red One retains Fuller’s humor and outrage, his ultimate belief in the grandeur of the little man who challenges the world to a fight—and lives to tell about it.