Catherine was born on 13 Oct 1805 in Providence, R.I., the daughter of Samuel Dexter and Sophia Adams.
She died on 17 Jun 1832 in Scituate, Rhode Island.
Her husband was Charles Jackson, who she married in 1827 in Rhode Island. They had no known children.
Event | Date | Details | Source | Multimedia | Notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Birth | 13 OCT 1805 |
|
|||||||
Death | 17 JUN 1832 |
|
|||||||
Burial | JUN 1832 |
|
![]() Dexter Genea... |
Descendants-... |
Note 1
Charles Jackson 1797-1876 Providence, Rhode Island
Governor, Cotton Manufacturer. Born to cotton manufacturer and future US Congressman Richard Jackson Jr. Graduated from Brown University in 1817 and studied law. He grew dissatisfied with law and in 1823 opened a cotton mill in Scituate, Rhode Island, becoming one of the first in the country to use power looms. He also became the first in Providence to make rubber, having received a patent from Charles Goodyear. He set up a factory to manufacture rifles and established a locomotive manufacturing firm.
Married Catherine Dexter who died in 1821 and married Phebe Tisdale and would have seven children. Only three of which survived him.
Served in the Rhode Island Legislature for several years and was Speaker from 1841 to 1842. In 1845 he defeated incumbent Governor James Fenner by 210 votes. While in office he signed a bill into law that pardoned all persons convicted of treason. This bill gave freedom to Dorr Rebellion leader Thomas Wilson Dorr. This was probably the main reason he was defeated for reelection by Byron Dimon. He returned to his former business pursuits and died nearly 30 years later.
Bio by: Matthew Fatale
findagrave 15935377