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Gerlach, Larry R. William Franklin: New Jersey's Last Royal Governor (1976), a scholarly biography Hart, Charles Henry (1911), "Who Was the Mother of Franklin's Son: An Inquiry demonstrating that she was Deborah Read, wife of Benjamin Franklin" , Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography , 35 (3), PSU: 308– 14 .
Temple's father William Franklin was Governor of New Jersey and a prominent Loyalist. William Temple Franklin, called Temple, was born in 1760, [1] the extramarital (and only) son of William Franklin, notably an extramarital son as well, who fathered him while a law student in London. His mother is unknown, and the infant was placed in foster care.
Franklin Lakes is a borough in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 11,079, [10] [11] an increase of 489 (+4.6%) from the 2010 census count of 10,590, [20] [21] which in turn reflected an increase of 168 (+1.6%) from the 10,422 counted in the 2000 census. [22]
Franklin Lakes turns 100 in 2022, and the borough has plenty of events planned while also remembering its history.
The charges date to 2021 when the men's company was hired by St. George & St. Shenouda Coptic Church in Jersey City to perform construction work.
The Old Ryan Farm, also known as the Benjamin Temple House and the Temple–Ryan Farmhouse, is a historic house built c. 1750 and located at 27 Federal City Road in the Ewingville section of Ewing Township in Mercer County, New Jersey, United States.
The Barnert Memorial Temple is a Reform Jewish synagogue located at 747 Route 208 South, in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, in the United States.The synagogue is the place of worship for the Congregation B'nai Jeshurun (transliteration from Hebrew as "Children of the Upright"), founded in Paterson in 1847.
Franklin Township was a township that existed in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States from 1771 until 1926. Franklin Township was established by Royal Charter on June 1, 1771, when Saddle River Township was subdivided. [2] The Township was named after the colonial-era Governor of New Jersey William Franklin, the illegitimate son of Benjamin ...