Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Constance, at the age of fourteen, along with her father and his second wife Elizabeth (Fisher), accompanied by brother Giles, half-sister Damaris as well as two servants by the name of Edward Doty and Edward Lester were passengers on the Mayflower on its journey to the New World in 1620.

  2. S tephen Hopkins was one of the most adventurous of the passengers aboard the Mayflower. He traveled with his second wife, Elizabeth (Fisher) Hopkins, and children Constanta, Giles and Damaris. Elizabeth was pregnant during the voyage and gave birth to a son Oceanus while at sea.

  3. 6 days ago · Constance Hopkins. was an Original Mayflower passenger. She was baptised on 11 May 1606, Hursley, Hampshire, England. She died mid-October 1677, Eastham. Massachusetts. Parents: Stephen Hopkins (1581-1644) of the Sea Venture & Mayflower & Mary his first wife. Married: sometime before the 22 May 1627 ; Division of Cattle to Nicholas Snow (1646 ...

    • May 11, 1606
    • October 25, 1677
  4. Constance Hopkins was a Mayflower passenger. She journeyed with her father and stepmother, Stephen and Elizabeth Hopkins, her brother Giles, her half-sister Damaris and her half-brother Oceanus who was born during the voyage. Sometime before 1627, Constance Hopkins married Nicholas Snow.

  5. This beaver hat is thought to have belonged to Mayflower passenger Constance Hopkins. It can be seen today at the Pilgrim Hall Museum in Plymouth.

    • constance hopkins mayflower passenger1
    • constance hopkins mayflower passenger2
    • constance hopkins mayflower passenger3
    • constance hopkins mayflower passenger4
  6. Dec 15, 2023 · Constance (Hopkins) Snow was a passenger on the Mayflower. Join: Mayflower Project Discuss: mayflower As a young girl of 14 years, Constance Hopkins arrived in Plymouth on the Mayflower with her well-known father, Stephen Hopkins , her brother Giles, half sister Damaris, stepmother Elizabeth Fisher Hopkins, and infant half brother, Oceanus, [1 ...

  7. The Mayflower set sail from Plymouth, England, with 102 passengers, 40 of whom called themselves ""Saints."" After two stormy months at sea, the ship reached the New World. Nearly half of the group died during their first winter due to malnutrition and the harsh New England winter."

  1. People also search for