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  1. Frances Jones may refer to: Frances Jones (colonist) (1710–1785), mother of the first First Lady of the United States, Martha Washington. Frances Follin Jones (1912–1999), American classicist and curator at the Art Museum, Princeton University. Frances Jones Mills (1920–1996), state official in Kentucky.

  2. Talk. : Frances Jones Dandridge. This article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography, a collaborative effort to create, develop and organize Wikipedia's articles about people. All interested editors are invited to join the project and contribute to the discussion. For instructions on how to use this banner, please refer to the documentation.

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  4. Politics Runs in The Family. Frances' father, Orlando Jones, was a Burgess for New Kent County in 1718 in the House of Burgesses, the leading legislative body in Colonial Virginia. Her grandfather, Col. Gideon Macon (father of Martha Macon), was also a member of the House of Burgesses from 1696 to 1702, and was secretary to Sir William Berkeley ...

  5. Childhood. Frances, or Fanny, was born on a plantation near Williamsburg on Queen's Creek within easy distance of the growing capital. Frances had an older brother, Lane Jones, born in 1707, and Frances was born in 1710. Her mother, Martha Macon Jones, died when Frances was only six years old.

    • Politics Runs in The Family
    • Childhood
    • Their Virginia Home
    • The Dandridge Children
    • Later Life
    • External Links
    • References

    Frances' father, Orlando Jones, was a Burgess for New Kent County in 1718 in the House of Burgesses, the leading legislative body in Colonial Virginia. Her grandfather, Col. Gideon Macon (father of Martha Macon), was also a member of the House of Burgesses from 1696 to 1702, and was secretary to Sir William Berkeley, governor of Virginia, during hi...

    Frances, or Fanny, was born on a plantation near Williamsburg on Queen's Creek within easy distance of the growing capital. Frances had an older brother, Lane Jones, born in 1707, and Frances was born in 1710. Her mother, Martha MaconJones, died when Frances was only six years old. Orlando Jones soon remarried. His second wife, Mary Elizabeth Willi...

    Shortly after Frances Jones married John Dandridge in New Kent County, Virginia on July 22, 1730, they moved to their new home, Chestnut Grove. John Dandridge became Clerk of Courts in New Kent and kept that position for the next 26 years. He was also vestryman and churchwarden for St. Peter's Church, Church of England. John was a prominent planter...

    John and Frances Jones Dandridge produced eight children, Martha Dandridgebeing the eldest. As was typical of the time, the children were educated at home, their education being considered quite liberal. John and Frances employed a tutor for their children. It was also quite unusual that Martha was presented to society in Williamsburg at the young ...

    Her husband, Colonel John Dandridge, died in Fredericksburg on 31 August 1756. He was interred at St. George's Episcopal Churchin Fredricksburg. There are a number of conflicting reports on the date of death for Frances Jones, but the one most commonly reported is July 9, 1785.

    Wharton, Anne Hollingsworth (1897). Martha Washington. C. Scribner's Sons. OCLC 3357626. Lossing, Benson John (1886). Mary and Martha, the mother and the wife of George Washington. New York : Harper & Brothers. OCLC 1708048. Brady, Patricia (2005). Martha Washington: An American Life. Viking. ISBN 0-14-303713-7.

  6. Feb 1, 2024 · Frances Orlando Jones (10 April 1710 9 July 1785) was born in New Kent County, Virginia, where she also died. Frances married John Dandridge on July 22, 1730 in New Kent County, Virginia. Frances was the daughter of Orlando Jones and Martha Macon, prosperous Virginia landowners, and she is more co

  7. By Dr. Samantha Burton. Frances Jones Bannerman, In the Conservatory, 1883, oil on canvas, 46.5 x 80.6 cm (Nova Scotia Archives, Halifax, NS; photo: Samantha Burton) In Frances Jones’s Impressionist painting In the Conservatory, a young woman reads in a glass windowed interior full of tropical plants. [1] The setting is the conservatory in ...

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