This Bible was owned by Samuel Price Wetherill the V (I Believe) there seams to be some dates across the websites on the internet mix up exactly how many Samuel Price Wetherills there were. From my count there seams to be 5 and the one that is commonly referred to as the III is actually the IV from what I can match up record wise and this Bible belonged to the V. The IV Commonly known as the III is the One known for his work with Zink. Samuel Price IV was also a field commanding officer during the Civil War. These Bibles were given to Samuel Price Wetherill V for Christmas (as dated in the Bible) from his sister Maria in 1859 a few years before the war. This Samuel Price Wetherill would have been around 13 when he received these. These bibles do have hand writing from what is believed his sister (pictured) as well as other family. There are also birth and Death records recorded in the Bible written by hand. The dates in the Bible seam to not exactly match up to some of the information found on google. For example it shows on one site that Samuel Price Wetherill V was born in 1846 when in the Bible here it shows 1844. Like mentioned above it seams as if there is a miscount of how many Samuel Price Wetherills there were and or what the genealogy for them was.


Here are some things I have found on the internet.




I believe this is the correct order:


Samuel Price Wetherill “JR” (1736 - 1816)


Samuel Price Wetherill III (1764-1829)


Samuel Price Wetherill (assumed) IV (1821-1890)


Samuel Price Wetherill (assumed) V (1844-1926)





eBay Link to Similar Auction :


https://www.ebay.com/itm/284167833586?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-127632-2357-0&ssspo=1tVr232sR3e&sssrc=2349624&ssuid=Uwmrd1SUTLu&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY




Samuel Price Wetherill JR Founded the “Free Quakers” after being expelled from the original “Quakers”


Betsy Ross was apart of the Free Quakers with Samuel Price Wetherill.



From Wiki:


The Religious Society of Free Quakers, originally called "The Religious Society of Friends, by some styled the Free Quakers," was established on February 20, 1781 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More commonly known as Free Quakers, the Society was founded by members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, who had been expelled for failure to adhere to the Peace Testimony during the American Revolutionary War. Many of its early members were prominent Quakers involved in the American Revolution before the society was established.


Notable Free Quakers at the early meetings included Samuel Wetherill, who served as clerk and preacher; Timothy Matlack and his brother White Matlack; William Crispin; Colonel Clement Biddle and his brother Owen Biddle; Benjamin Say; Christopher Marshall; Joseph Warner; and Peter Thompson.[1] Other notable Free Quakers include Lydia Darragh and Betsy Ross.


Following the end of the American Revolutionary War, the number of Free Quakers began to dwindle as some members died and others were either accepted back into the Society of Friends or by other religious institutions. The final meeting of the Free Quakers was held in 1836. There is a small group of Free Quakers in Indiana who continue the tradition of the Five Principles (Inner Light, peace, simplicity, justice, stewardship) and the Five Freedoms (from creeds, from clergy, from public worship, from organized membership, from evangelization). Today, the descendants of the original Free Quakers hold an annual meeting of the Religious Society of Free Quakers at the Free Quaker Meetinghouse in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.


2 of the Bible’s have been bound with something to help preserve the spine. One of the other 2 has half the spine and the one with the records is the one with no spine that will need repair. Pages are all in good shape howyand repair should be easy for a skilled book repair person.