Sarah Fuller Flower was born 22 February 1805, at
Old Harlow,
Essex, and baptised in September 1806 at the Water Lane Independent Chapel in
Bishops Stortford. She was the younger daughter of the radical editor
Benjamin Flower, and his wife Eliza Gould. Her uncles included
Richard Flower, who emigrated to the United States in 1822 and was a founder of the town of
Albion, Illinois; and the nonconformist minister
John Clayton. Her mother died when she was only five years old and initially her father, a liberal in politics and religion, brought the daughters up, taking a hand in their education. The family moved to
Dalston in
Middlesex, where they met the writer
Harriet Martineau, who was struck by the two sisters and used them for her novel "Deerbrook". In 1823, on a holiday in
Scotland with friends of the radical preacher William Johnson Fox, the minister of South Place Unitarian Chapel, London, who was a frequent visitor to their home, Adams broke the female record for climbing up
Ben Lomond. Back home, the girls became friends with the young poet
Robert Browning, who discussed his religious doubts with Adams. ==Career==