*** Welcome to piglix ***

Esther Edwards Burr

Esther Edwards Burr
Esther Edwards Burr (cropped).jpg
Born Esther Edwards
(1732-02-13)February 13, 1732
Northampton, Province of Massachusetts Bay, British America
Died April 7, 1758(1758-04-07) (aged 26)
Princeton, Province of New Jersey, British America
Cause of death Smallpox
Spouse(s) Aaron Burr, Sr.
Children Aaron Burr, Jr.
Sarah Burr
Parent(s) Jonathan Edwards
Sarah Pierrepont
Relatives Theodosia Burr Alston (granddaughter)

Esther Edwards Burr (February 13, 1732 in Northampton, Province of Massachusetts Bay - April 7, 1758 in Princeton, Province of New Jersey) was the mother of U.S. Vice President Aaron Burr, Jr. and the wife of Princeton University President Aaron Burr, Sr. whom she married in 1752. Her journal (which she began in October 1754) records her perspectives on her daily activities and current events; it is important in studies of American history and literature.

Esther Edwards was the third oldest of eleven children of Sarah Pierrepont and the famed preacher of the Great Awakening, Jonathan Edwards. Esther was named after Edwards' mother and grandmother. She initially grew up in the town of Northampton, but Jonathan Edwards had a falling out with the church in Northampton, which led in 1751 to the family moving to the frontier settlement in in western Massachusetts.

Esther Burr was a member of the Church at Stockbridge and Northampton and later the church in Newark. In 1752, Esther married Aaron Burr, Sr., President of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University). As the wife of a university president and prominent minister, Esther managed the affairs of the household and hosted many of the scholars of the school at her home.

Esther Burr's daughter, Sarah, married Tapping Reeve, the founder of America's first law school. Esther Burr's son, Aaron, was the third Vice President of the United States (1801–05).

Like the earlier journal of Sarah Kemble Knight, Esther Burr's Journal provides insight into a woman's daily life in the late colonial period of the United States. Esther Burr's Journal might be called an epistolary diary, since, rather than being a traditional diary written as a private record for oneself, Esther Burr's Journal consists of letters exchanged with her childhood friend Sarah Prince in Boston. In the Journal, Sarah Prince is referred to as Fidelia while Sarah refers to Esther as Burrissa.


...
Wikipedia

...