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  1. Apr 19, 2022 · Biography . Damaris Hopkins was the second daughter named Damaris that was born to Stephen Hopkins and his wife Elizabeth (Fisher) Hopkins. She was born after the 22 May 1627 cattle division and died before November 18, 1669. She was married to Jacob Cooke, son of Mayflower passenger Francis Cooke. Jacob Cooke married first at Plymouth, Damaris ...

    • Stephen Hopkins

      It is stated by some that Stephen Hopkins, prior to his...

    • Mary

      Biography. Mary was a daughter of Jacob Cooke and his wife...

  2. Jacob Cook, born circa 1618 at Leiden; married 1) at Plymouth, soon after 10 June 1646, Damaris Hopkins, daughter of Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower; they had seven children: Elizabeth, Caleb, Jacob, Mary, Martha, Francis and Ruth Cook; married 2) at Plymouth, 18 November 1669, Elizabeth (Lettice) Shurtleff and had two children: probably Sarah ...

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  4. Passenger Profile. 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.

  5. Jan 5, 2016 · Jacob Cooke (son of Francis Cooke and Hester le Mahieu) married Damaris Hopkins on 10 Jun 1646, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts. He was born 20 may 1618 in Leiden, and died at Plymouth in the Plymouth Colony on 11 December 1675. Damaris was his first wife.

    • Plymouth, Plymouth Colony
    • Jacob Cooke
    • Plymouth Colony
    • Life in Holland
    • Mayflower and Life in Plymouth
    • Francis Cooke Family Chart
    • Conclusion

    Francis Cooke's first appearance in the historical record occurs on April 25, 1603, in Leiden, Holland, where he was named a witness at Raphael Roelandt's betrothal. Cooke lived in Leiden for about six years before the 1609 arrival of the congregation of English Separatists led by Pastor John Robinson. Cooke was betrothed to Hester Mahieu at the Fr...

    Francis and his son John made the trip to Plymouth aboard the Mayflower. The voyage was not a pleasant one. Quarters were cramped, and 2 months into the voyage, the ship was dealing with many leaks that left the passengers wet and sick. Hygiene was terrible, and these conditions led to the death of a passenger and crew member. Once they arrived at ...

    Parents:Unknown Siblings: Unknown Spouse: Hester Mahieu (1584 - 1666) Children: The information that follows comes from The Mayflower Society Jane Cooke (1604 - 1641)- born probably at Leiden, Holland, circa 1604; died date unknown, by 1651, the 1630s; married at Plymouth, soon after 22 May 1627, Experience Mitchell, and had three children: Elizabe...

    Francis Cooke lived until 1663 and had been part of the Plymouth Colony for over 40 years. During that time, he would have witnessed the following: 1. Treaty with the Wampanoag Tribe 2. The meeting of Squanto, Samoset, and Chief Massasoit 3. Unprecedented hardship and death 4. An expansion of his property 5. The arrival of other groups to colonize ...

  6. Sep 18, 2020 · Biography. Damaris Cooke (twin of John Cooke) was born 23 May 1703 at Kingston, [1] Plymouth, Massachusetts. She was the daughter of Jacob Cooke and Lydia Miller. Damaris married John Delano at Kingston, Plymouth on 15 Nov 1749. [2] John was born 11 Oct 1699 at Duxbury, Massachusetts, and died between 16 Nov 1774 and 5 Aug 1766.

  7. Damaris, born Plymouth say 1628; married Plymouth just after 10 June 1646, Jacob, son of Francis Cooke [Mayflower 1620] Ruth, born Plymouth say 1630; died after 30 November 1644 and before spring 1651 [Bradford 445]

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