He influenced Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, and especially Ralph Waldo Emerson who used his philosophical framework extensively in support of his own first book Nature.
The route became popular and garnered a mention in the work of writer Margaret Fuller.
Margaret Thatcher | Margaret Atwood | Buckminster Fuller | Margaret | Margaret Mead | Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon | Margaret Weis | Princess Margaret | Margaret Cho | Princess Margaret Hospital | Margaret Mitchell | Margaret Bourke-White | Simon Fuller | Margaret of Anjou | Margaret Court | Margaret Becker | Margaret Sullavan | Margaret Hodge | Bob and Margaret | Samuel Fuller | Margaret Murray | Margaret Tudor | Margaret the Virgin | Margaret of York | Margaret of Austria | Margaret Laurence | Margaret Island | Lady Margaret Boat Club | Bryan Fuller | Thomas Fuller |
She became a prominent member of the literary society of New York along with Anne Lynch Botta, Edgar Allan Poe, Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Horace Greeley, Richard Henry Stoddard, Andrew Carnegie, Mary Mapes Dodge, Julia Ward Howe, Charles Butler, Fitz-Greene Halleck, Delia Bacon, and Bayard Taylor, among others.
Overlea first started out as a 43 acre tract, owned by Margaret Fuller (Fullerton, Maryland is named for her most likely).
Initially Fuller's parents, the physician and medical author Arthur William Fuller and Florence Margaret Fuller (née Montgomery), of St John's Wood, London, sent their son to Ealing Priory School (the subsequently renamed St Benedict's School) where he happened to share classes and hone his Latin skills in contest with the 20 months younger, the later New Testament scholar and his colleague on a number of major scholarly projects, John Bernard Orchard.