It is from Cervantes's Don Quixote: Every man was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth.
A Teenager born in a North Eastern Small Town in Ohio. This phrase is intended to be spoken sarcastically when you don't believe a statement.
Henry Chadwick, from Hoboken NJ. He was English-born. see the wikipedia article on hoboken
Silver spoon(s)
He didn't. There is no evidence that he coined that phrase though it is very often atteributed to him. The earliest appearance of the phrase in print is in the 1885 biography of con man "Hungry Joe". Earlier spoken attributions are to a number of con men as well as one of Barnum's rivals who tried to discredit him.
To say someone is born into something, you can also use the phrase "born with a silver spoon in their mouth" or "born into privilege/circumstances."
There is a google article about her 107th birthday (Dec. 9, 2013) where it describes the "bug" that she found while they were testing the computer (Mark I Electromechanical Computing Machine). The anecdotal story is that the moth they found was a bug and that they debugged the machine.
The phrase came out of San Francisco, California. It has been thought it was Timothy O'leary to first use the phrase to give innocence to the drug culture. There was no "Baby-boom" after WWII. Actually, There was a percapita reduction in children born between 1943 and 1964. The actual percapita "Baby-boom" was in the 1800 to 1845 then again after 1964. But, the term BABYBOOMER GENERATION has to do with the DRUG CULTURE, and the Socialistic Movement in the USA.
Adam Silver was born on April 25, 1962
Shelly Silver was born in 1957.
Jonathan Silver was born in 1949.
James Silver was born in 1907.
Véronique Silver was born in 1931.