| 
  1 Feb 1706 | 
Rose Fuller’s elder brother John Fuller born at Brightling,
  Sussex | 
| 
12 Apr
  1708 | 
Rose
  Fuller (RF) born at Brightling, Sussex. Baptized on 27 Apr 1708 at Brightling | 
| 
28 Oct 1709 | 
RF’s sister Elizabeth
  Fuller born at Brightling, Sussex | 
| 
15 Jan 1713 | 
RF’s brother Henry Fuller
  born at Brightling, Sussex | 
| 
  2 Nov 1715 | 
RF’s brother Thomas born at
  Brightling, Sussex | 
| 
27 Nov 1716 | 
RF’s brother Stephen
  christened at Waldron, Sussex | 
| 
1721 | 
Ithamar
  Mill born at St Catherine, Jamaica | 
| 
1724 | 
Richard
  Mill, father-in-law of RF, called to the Council of Jamaica | 
| 
1725 | 
Richard
  Mill, father-in-law of RF, appointed Receiver General of Jamaica | 
| 
1728 | 
RF trained
  as Medical Doctor at Cambridge; Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge | 
| 
26 Apr 1729  | 
RF studied
  medicine at Leiden, Holland (sometimes Leyden) | 
| 
20 Apr
  1732 | 
RF
  made Fellow of the Royal Society | 
| 
11 Dec
  1732 | 
RF
  sails for Jamaica when management of estates by attorneys resulted in loss of
  profits | 
| 
1733 | 
RF arrived in Spanish Town, Jamaica | 
| 
17 May 1733 | 
Molasses Act passed by British
  Parliament to regulate trade by imposing a sixpence per gallon tax on
  molasses imported by the American Colonies from non-British sugar producing
  countries.  It was unsuccessful,
  however, as smuggling and bribing customs officials nullified the law.  | 
| 
1735 | 
RF elected member for St Catherine to
  the Jamaica Assembly | 
| 
28 Jan 1735 | 
William Fuller born in Spanish Town,
  Jamaica(son of Mary Johnston Rose and possibly Rose Fuller) | 
| 
18 Apr 1735  | 
William Fuller baptized  | 
| 
26 Apr 1737 | 
RF married Ithamar Mill, daughter of
  Richard Mill  | 
| 
1737 | 
RF called to council and made supreme
  court judge in Jamaica | 
| 
22 Apr
  1738 | 
Ithamar
  Mill, RF’s wife died in childbirth. The baby did not survive.  | 
| 
16
  June 1739 | 
Death
  of Richard Mill. Grange Penn and a house in Spanish Town left to his
  son-in-law RF “And lastly in regard to the Tenderness and affection with
  which my Son in Law Doctor Rose Fuller used his late wife my dearly beloved
  Daughter I do hereby give devise and bequeath All the rest residue and remainder
  of my Reall (sic) and Personal Estate whatsoever to the said Doctor Rose
  Fuller his Heirs Executors Administrators and Assigns forever”: Source - http://aparcelofribbons.co.uk/apr/archive/files/d66a7ac8401bea479e2b5b9e8b19963f.pdf | 
| 
23 Aug
  1739 | 
Richard
  Mill’s will proved at London | 
| 
1740 | 
Disputes with Governor William Trelawny
  led to removal  of RF from the council  | 
| 
1742 | 
RF’s brother Thomas Fuller starts work
  as a sugar merchant in London | 
| 
1745 | 
Mary Johnston Rose, a free mulatto, applied
  for herself and her mulatto sons, Thomas Wynter (son of Dr William Wynter?)and
  William Fuller (son of Rose Fuller?), “as if white” status.  | 
| 
1746 | 
Disputes with Governor William Trelawny
  led to RF’s removal from the bench | 
| 
28 Nov
  1746 | 
English parliament confirmed an Act of
  the Jamaican Assembly granting Mary Rose Johnson and her sons “as if white”
  status.   | 
| 
1749 | 
RF back in England | 
| 
1752 | 
RF returned to Jamaica | 
| 
19 Mar
  1753 | 
RF appointed Chief Justice of Jamaica and chief judge of the court
  of judicature sitting at St Jago de la Vega (Spanish Town) by governor
  Charles Knowles | 
| 
31 Jan
  1754 | 
RF led
  a rally of several hundred people to protest the bid to move the capital of
  Jamaica from Spanish Town to Kingston near the building in which Governor
  Knowles was leading a session of the court of chancery. Fuller was charged
  with inciting a riot although no riot occurred.  | 
| 
7 Oct 1754 | 
Knowles wrote to the Board of Trade
  ‘complaining of the “tyrannical proceedings of Dr. Fuller in his capacity of
  judge”. RF resigned as Chief Justice | 
| 
  5 Feb 1755 | 
Death
  of elder brother, John Fuller. Rose Fuller who now became heir of the Fuller
  estate, including Rose Hill, Brightling.  | 
| 
15 Feb
  1755 | 
In a
  letter to RF, brother Stephen Fuller writes of his preparations for RF’s
  return to England,  
“I
  take it you will have no OBJECTION TO A Celler full of Strong Bere…and will
  take care to lay in a Proportionable Stock of wine.”(sic) | 
| 
Aug
  1755 | 
RF arrives
  in England. There is no evidence that he ever returned to Jamaica. | 
| 
1756-1763 | 
Seven
  Years War aka French and Indian War | 
| 
9 Oct 1756 | 
Letter
  written to RF by his sister Elizabeth (Fuller) Slone thanking him for her
  long stay at Rosehill and saying of RF and brother Stephen Fuller, “'both run
  great risk of your healths with such riotous living'.  | 
| 
1756-1761 | 
RF
  elected MP for New Romney. | 
| 
20 Feb 1757 | 
John
  “Mad Jack” Fuller born at North Stoneham, Hampshire. | 
| 
23 Jul 1761 | 
RF’s brother, the Rev Henry
  Fuller dies leaving his only son, John “Mad Jack” Fuller as sole heir.  | 
| 
1764 | 
RF’s brother Stephen Fuller
  becomes Jamaica’s agent in London, a post he held until 1795. | 
| 
  5 Apr 1764 | 
The Sugar Act passed by
  British Parliament.  It effectively
  halved the tax imposed by the Molasses Law and was meant to raise revenue as
  well as regulate the sugar trade.  | 
| 
  6 Feb 1765 | 
Although he had supported
  it earlier, RF spoke out and voted against the Stamp Act | 
| 
15 Feb 1765 | 
Presented a petition
  against the Stamp Act on behalf of merchants trading with Jamaica | 
| 
1761-1768 | 
RF was MP for Maidstone | 
| 
16 Mar 1768-1777 | 
RF was MP for Rye | 
| 
 
  8 Feb 1769 | 
RF warned the House that putting
  pressure on America would have undesired consequences saying,”Where do
  gentlemen wish to end? Do they expect that before it is ended the Americans
  should in their assemblies declare the power of taxing them to be in this
  country?” | 
| 
 
  5 Mar 1770 | 
RF advocated for the repeal of the tea
  duty | 
| 
1773 | 
In reaction to the Boston Tea Party, RF
  made a speech in the House of Commons offering his experience in trade with
  Jamaica and America to submit a plan to the house and stating that instead of
  going on European tours, young members might have better spent their time
  visiting America.  | 
| 
21 Mar 1774 | 
RF said, “I am from the bottom of my
  heart convinced that if this bill passes as it now is it will ruin this
  country”, on the second reading of the Boston port bill. | 
| 
1776-1783 | 
American Revolutionary War | 
| 
 
  7 May 1777 | 
Death of Rose Fuller; Buried 15 May
  1777 at Waldron, Sussex. John “Mad Jack” Fuller is chief beneficiary of Rose
  Fuller’s estate.  Spanish Town house
  left the lifetime use of Mary Johnston, Rose.   | 
| 
15 May 1777 | 
RF buried at Waldron, Sussex | 
| 
20 Feb1783 | 
Jamaica House of Assembly resolved to
  write to Stephen Fuller, RF’s brother and Jamaica agent in London, requesting
  he commission a sculptor to create a statue of Lord Rodney to commemorate Rodney’s
  victory over the French fleet on 12 Apr 1782. | 
| 
19 Mar 1783 | 
Mary Johnston Rose buried in St
  Catherine, Jamaica | 
| 
1789 | 
Thomas Wynter died.  | 
| 
1808 | 
Slave trade abolished in British Empire | 
| 
1833 | 
Slave Emancipation Act | 
| 
11 Apr 1834  | 
Death of John “Mad Jack”
  Fuller at his London home, 36 Devonshire Place.  | 
| 
1838 | 
Apprenticeships end; true
  emancipation  | 
| 
1846 | 
William Rose Wynter, grandson of Mary
  Johnston Rose, died in Devon, England | 
Sunday, January 05, 2014
Rose Fuller Timeline
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2 comments:
Annette - Tony in Wasaga Beach says: Jack Fuller is recorded as having wished to be interred in his sepulchre sated in full dress at a table spread with his favourite fare, including a plate of roast beef and a bottle of his favourite Claret. It is not certain whether or not his wish was complied with. Any comment?
There are many apocryphal tales about Fuller that have be unsubstantiated, including this one. When repair work was done on his pyramid mausoleum in 1982 it was determined that he is in fact buried in the conventional manner beneath its floor. Cheers, Annette.
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