Samuel Phillips was born in
Salem, Massachusetts on February 17, 1690. Phillips was the second eldest child and eldest son of Samuel Phillips and Mary Emerson and one of eight siblings, including one half-sister: •
Patience died young. •
Sarah (January 28, 1692 – 1737) married William White, of
Haverhill, in Boston June 12, 1716. Before her marriage, she was probably living with a relative or friend in Boston as she was living with her father Samuel Phillips of Salem. They had eleven children. •
Mary (August 5, 1694 – October 5, 1785) married Capt. George Abbot, of Andover, in Salem November 29, 1721. •
Ruth (September 4, 1696 – ?) married Samuel White, of Haverhill, in 1718 or April 21, 1724, in
Ipswich according to the Hamlet Parish Church record, now a part of
Hamilton, Massachusetts. They had seven children. •
Elizabeth (March 5, 1699 – August 7, 1700) died young. •
John (June 22, 1701 – April 19, 1768) was a
Boston merchant, bookseller and publisher, deacon of the
Brattle Street Church, colonel of the Boston Regiment, and a Justice of the Peace and of the Quorum. He is the grandfather of
John Phillips, first mayor of Boston, great-grandfather of
Wendell Phillips. He married Mary Buttolph (May 8, 1703 – August 15, 1742) on November 21, 1723, and after she died Abigail Webb of
Fairfield, Connecticut. Child with second wife Sarah Mayfield, married April 27, 1704: •
Patience (August 8, 1706 – November 14, 1773) married Rev. David Jewett of
New London, Connecticut, and had two children. She met Jewitt while he was a theology student at Harvard. Jewitt was ill, and she helped bring him back to good health. She also, according to parish records in New London, was born with one hand, but was still able to perform most of the tasks those with two could. His grandfather was Rev. Samuel Phillips of
Rowley and his great-grandfather
George Phillips of
Watertown, one of the first to settle in Watertown and founder of its First Congregational Church. Phillips was admitted to
Harvard College in July 1704 and graduated in 1708. After about a year of teaching in Chebacco (formerly a parish of
Ipswich and currently
Essex), Massachusetts, he became more focused on preparing for the ministry. == Ministry ==