| Sources |
- [S50] Plymouth Colony- Its History and People; AncestryView for Windows:, (Name: CD ROM;), Biographies.
Stephen Hopkins- ... A popularized biography of Stephen Hopkins was written by Margaret Hodges, Hopkins of the Mayflower-Portrait of a Dissenter (New York, 1972). Claims that a John Hopkins of Hartford, Connecticut, was his son are baseless. By his first wife he had Constance, who married Nicholas Snow, and [p.310] Giles, who married Catherine Wheldon. By Elizabeth Fisher he had the Damaris, who died young; Oceanus, who died young; Caleb, who died at Barbados as an adult without issue; Deborah, who married Andrew Ring; the second Damaris, who married Jacob Cooke, son of Francis; Ruth, who died without issue; and Elizabeth, who died without issue (Dawes-Gates, 2:449).
- [S50] Plymouth Colony- Its History and People; AncestryView for Windows:, (Name: CD ROM;), part 4, Appendix C: Bradford's Mayflower Passenger List.
Mr. Steven Hopkins, and Elizabeth, his wife, and 2 children, caled Giles, and Constanta, a doughter, both by a former wife; and 2 more by his wife, caled Damaris and Oceanus; the last was borne at sea; and two servants, called Edward Doty and Edward Litster... and: Mr. Hopkins and his wife are now both dead, but they lived above 20 years in this place, and had one sone and 4 doughters borne here. Ther sone became a seaman, and dyed at Barbadoes; one daughter dyed here, and 2 are maried; one of them hath 2 children; and one is yet to mary. So their increase which still survive are 5 But his sone Giles is maried, and hath 4 children.
- [S50] Plymouth Colony- Its History and People; AncestryView for Windows:, (Name: CD ROM;), Biographies.
Hopkins, Elizabeth, Plymouth Colony, p.307 -The wife of Stephen Hopkins, q.v., Elizabeth's maiden name was probably Fisher. She accompanied Hopkins on the 1620 Mayflower.
- [S50] Plymouth Colony- Its History and People; AncestryView for Windows:, (Name: CD ROM;), part 4, Appendix C: Bradford's Mayflower Passenger List.
Mr. Steven Hopkins (2) facts
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from front Citation Text-
Mr. Steven Hopkins, and Elizabeth, his wife, and 2 children, caled Giles, and Constanta, a doughter, both by a former wife; and 2 more by his wife, caled Damaris and Oceanus; the last was borne at sea; and two servants, called Edward Doty and Edward Litster... and: Mr. Hopkins and his wife are now both dead, but they lived above 20 years in this place, and had one sone and 4 doughters borne here. Ther sone became a seaman, and dyed at Barbadoes; one daughter dyed here, and 2 are maried; one of them hath 2 children; and one is yet to mary. So their increase which still survive are 5
But his sone Giles is maried, and hath 4 children.
- [S341] Brøderbund Software, Inc., World Family Tree European Origins Vol. E1, Ed. 1, (Name: Release date: September 15, 1997;), Tree #0361.
Date of Import: 22 May 2001
- [S341] Brøderbund Software, Inc., World Family Tree European Origins Vol. E1, Ed. 1, (Name: Release date: September 15, 1997;), ****Tree #0361.
Date of Import: 22 May 2001 ...................... (199)
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Date of Import: 22 May 2001 (6) facts ....... (200)
Edmund BANGS
- [S1180] Wikipedia, Mayflower passenger list.
Record for William Hopkins (3) facts
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List of passengers on the Mayflower
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor by William Halsall (1882)
This is a list of the 102 passengers on board the Mayflower during its trans-Atlantic voyage of September 6 - November 9, 1620, among them the 50 Pilgrim settlers of Plymouth Colony in what is now Massachusetts. The Mayflower launched with 102 passengers, as well as at least two dogs. One baby was born during the trip and named Oceanus Hopkins. Another, Peregrine (meaning "wanderer") White, was born on the Mayflower in America on November 20, before the settlement at Plymouth. About half of these emigrants died in the first winter. Many Americans can trace their ancestry back to one or more of these individuals.
[edit] Pilgrim Families
Provincetown memorial to Pilgrims who died in Provincetown Harbor
Allerton, Isaac
Mary (Norris) Allerton, wife (Newbury, Berkshire)[1]
Bartholomew Allerton, son (Leiden, Netherlands)
Remember Allerton, daughter (Leiden, Netherlands)
Mary Allerton, daughter (Leiden, Netherlands), the last survivor of the Mayflower company[2]
Bradford, William (Austerfield, Yorkshire)
Dorothy (May) Bradford, wife (Wisbech, Cambridgeshire)
Brewster, William (Doncaster, Yorkshire)
Mary Brewster, wife
Love Brewster, son (Leiden, Netherlands)
Wrestling Brewster, son (Leiden, Netherlands)
Carver, John
Catherine (Leggett) (White) Carver, wife (probably Sturton-le-Steeple, Nottinghamshire)
Chilton, James (Canterbury)[2]
Mrs. Susanna Chilton, wife
Mary Chilton, daughter (Sandwich, Kent)
Cooke, Francis
John Cook, son (Leiden, Netherlands)
Cooper, Humility - (probably Leiden, Netherlands) baby daughter of Robert Cooper, in company of her aunt Ann Cooper Tilley, wife of Edward Tilley[3]
Crackstone, John (Stratford St. Mary, Suffolk)
John Crackstone, son
Fletcher, Moses (probably Canterbury, Kent)
Fuller, Edward (Redenhall, Norfolk)[2]
Mrs. Edward Fuller, wife
Samuel Fuller, son
Fuller, Samuel (Redenhall, Norfolk), (brother to Edward)
Goodman, John
Minter, Desire (Norwich, Norfolk)
Priest, Degory
Rogers, Thomas (Watford, Northamptonshire)
Joseph Rogers, son (Watford, Northamptonshire)
Sampson, Henry (Henlow, Bedfordshire) child in company of his uncle and aunt Edward and Ann Tilley[3]
Tilley, Edward (Henlow, Bedfordshire)
Ann (Cooper) Tilley (Henlow, Bedfordshire) wife of Edward and aunt of Humilty Cooper and Henry Sampson
Tilley, John (Henlow, Bedfordshire)
Joan (Hurst) (Rogers) Tilley, wife (Henlow, Bedfordshire)
Elizabeth Tilley, daughter (Henlow, Bedfordshire)
Tinker, Thomas
Mrs. Thomas Tinker, wife
boy Tinker, son
Turner, John
boy Turner, son
boy Turner, younger son
White, William
Susanna (Unknown) White , wife
Resolved White, son
Peregrine White, son (born in Provincetown Harbor)
Williams, Thomas, (Great Yarmouth, Norfolk)
Winslow, Edward (Droitwich, Worcestershire)
Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow, wife
[edit] Planters recruited by London merchants
Billington, John (possibly Spalding, Lincolnshire)
Eleanor Billington, wife
John Billington, son
Francis Billington, son
Britteridge, Richard
Browne, Peter (Dorking, Surrey)
Clarke, Richard
Eaton, Francis (Bristol, Avon (historic: Somerset))
Sarah Eaton, wife
Samuel Eaton, son
Gardiner, Richard (Harwich, Essex)
Hopkins, Stephen (Upper Clatford, Hampshire)
Elizabeth (Fisher) Hopkins, wife
Giles Hopkins, son by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire)
Constance Hopkins, daughter by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire)
Damaris Hopkins, daughter
Oceanus Hopkins, born en route
Margesson, Edmund
Martin, Christopher (Billericay, Essex)
Mary (Prower) Martin, wife
Mullins, William (Dorking, Surrey)
Alice Mullins, wife
Priscilla Mullins, daughter
Joseph Mullins, son
Prower, Solomon (Billericay, Essex)
Rigsdale, John
Alice Rigsdale, wife
Standish, Myles (Chorley, Lancashire)
Rose Standish, wife
Warren, Richard (Hertford, England)
Winslow, Gilbert (Droitwich, Worcestershire), brother to "Pilgrim" Edward Winslow but not known to have lived in Leiden
[edit] Men hired to stay one year
Alden, John (Harwich, Essex) - considered a ship's crewman (he was the ship's cooper) but joined settlers
Allerton, John, was listed as a hired man but was apparently related to one of the Pilgrim families onboard, Isaac Allerton's, who all came from Leiden. He sailed in order to settle in North America, and was to return to England to help the rest of the group immigrate, but died during the first winter of the Pilgrims' settlement, may have been relative of "Pilgrim" Allerton family.[4]
Ely, Richard, hired as seaman, returned to England after term was up but later returned to New England and died there. He is mentioned briefly as a sailor by name of Ely in "Of Plymouth Plantation."
English, Thomas, hired to master a shallop but died in the winter
Trevore, William, hired as seaman, returned to England after term was up
[edit] Family servants
Thirteen of the 18 people in this category were attached to Pilgrim families, the other five were attached to Non-Pilgrim families.
Butten, William, age: "a youth", servant of Samuel Fuller, only person who died during the voyage
Carter, Robert, age unknown, servant or apprentice to William Mullins, shoemaker.
--?--, Dorothy, maidservant of John Carver.
Doty, Edward, (possibly Lincolnshire) age probably about 21, servant to Stephen Hopkins
Holbeck, William, age likely under 21, servant to William White
Hooke, John, (probably Norwich, Norfolk) age 13, apprenticed to Isaac Allerton
Howland, John (probably Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire), age about 21, manservant for Governor John Carver
Lancemore, John (probably Shropshire or Worcestershire), age under 21, servant to the Christopher Martin
Latham, William, age 11, servant/apprentice to the John Carver family
Leister, Edward (Kensington), aged over 21, servant to Stephen Hopkins
Moore, Ellen, (Shipton, Shropshire), age 8, indentured to Edward Winslow
Jasper More, (Shipton, Shropshire), brother, age 7, indentured to John Carver
Richard, (Shipton, Shropshire), brother, age 6, indentured to William Brewster
Mary, (Shipton, Shropshire), sister, age 4, indentured to William Brewster
Soule, George, teacher of Edward Winslow's children
Story, Elias, age under 21, in the care of Edward Winslow
Thompson, Edward, age under 21, in the care of the William White family, first passenger to die after the Mayflower reached Cape Cod.
Wilder, Roger, age under 21, servant in the John Carver family
In all, there were 102 passengers on the Mayflower - 74 men and 28 women
[edit] Carpenters
Kerr, George
[edit] Animals
At least two dogs are known to have participated in the settling of Plymouth. In Mourt's Relation Edward Winslow writes that a female mastiff and a small springer spaniel came ashore on the first explorations of what is now Provincetown. There may have been other animals on the Mayflower, but none are mentioned.[3]
[edit] See also
List of Mayflower passengers who died in the winter of 1620 - 1621
The Mayflower Society
[edit] References
^ Locations of birth for Mayflower passengers follow Caleb Johnson's list as found at Mayflower History.com, accessed August 29, 2006
^ a b Division of passengers by category generally follows Appendix I of Saints and Strangers by George F. Willison with the following exceptions, as per The Plymouth Colony Archive Project, Passengers on the Mayflower: Ages & Occupations, Origins & Connections [1], 2000, Patricia Scott Deetz and James F. Deetz: The families of James Chilton and Edward Fuller, brother of "saint" Samuel Fuller as well as Thomas Williams, are now known to have been living at Leiden and cannot fit the category of recruited by London merchants and have been listed with the Pilgrims. Significant scholarship has produced many new documents since Willison's 1945 publication.
^ a b Humility Cooper and Henry Sampson were both children who joined their uncle and aunt Edward and Ann Tilley for the voyage. Willison lists them as "strangers" because they were not members of the church at Leiden; however, as children they would have been under their aunt and uncle who were members of that group.
^ "MayflowerHistory.com". MayflowerHistory.com. http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/Passengers/JohnAllerton.php. Retrieved on 2009-05-15.
[edit] General Source
Mayflower passengers from William Bradford's Of Plymouth Plantation, 1650.
List of passengers on the Mayflower
1620
Wikipedia with Pictures
List of passengers on the Mayflower - With Pictures
Christopher Johnston originally shared this on 17 Jul 2009
Linked to
Stephen Hopkins
Mary Hopkins
William Hopkins
Governor Edward Winslow
Nicholas Hopkins
Bethia Hopkins
Constance Mary Hopkins
William Hopkins
- [S3065] Ancestry.com, London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Lehi, UT, USA; Date: 2010;), London Metropolitan Archives; London, England, UK; London Church of England Parish Registers; Reference Number: P93/MRY1/001.
Record for Eliza Fisher (7) facts
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Eliza Fisher
London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812
Name [Elizabeth Fisher ]
Eliza Fisher
Gender Female
Record Marriage
Marriage 19 Feb 1617
Saint Mary, Whitechapel: Whitechapel High Street, Tower Hamlets, Tower Hamlets, Middlesex, England
Spouse Stephen Hopkins
Register Parish Register
Reference 17947932
Additional Reference 183584
Stephen Hopkins
London Metropolitan Archives; London, England, UK; London Church of England Parish Registers; Reference Number: P93/MRY1/001
- [S2171] Ancestry.com, Lamont-Eldredge family records, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT; Date: 2005;), MAYFLOWER PASSENGERS HOPKINS.
Record for Stephen HOPKINS (1) fact
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From D.A.C. Stephen Hopkins born Eng., was the 14th signer of the Mayflower Compact; was in the first encounter with the Indians; was a member of Standish's Military Company formed 1621; also served as Governor's Asst. 1633-1636 and was a member of the Council of War for Plymouth colony 1642. He died 1644; married 1st Constance Dudley.
Children of Stephen by 1st wife:
1. Constance Hopkins, b. 1605; m. Nicholas Snow.
2. Giles Hopkins, b. ca 1607; m. Catherine Wheldon (Weldon) Oct. 9, 1639.
Children of Stephen Hopkins and Elizabeth Fisher:
1. Damaris Hopkins, b. 1619; d. young.
2. Oceanus Hopkins, b. 1620 on Mayflower; d. before 1627.
3. Caleb Hopkins, b. 1623.
4. Deborah Hopkins, b. 1625; m. Andrew Ring.
5. Damaris Hopkins, b. 1627.
6. Ruth Hopkins.
7. Elizabeth Hopkins.
MAYFLOWER PASSENGER - GILES or GYLES HOPKINS
Giles Hopkins, (Stephen) came on Mayflower with father; m. Catherine Wheldon Oct. 9, 1639 (Plymouth Colonial Vital Records). She was daughter of Gabruel Wheldon of Yarnouth. Giles died after Mch. 15, 1689, when he made a codicil to this will (Mayflower Descendants I, p. 110) and April 26, 1690, when his will was probated (Mayflower Descendant II, p. 117). His widow survived.
Children of Giles and Catherin Wheldon (Weldon):
1. Mary Hopkins, b. Nov. 1640; m. Samuel Smith Jan. 3, 1665. See Smith.
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Lamont-Eldridge family records
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From D.A.C. Stephen Hopkins born Eng., was the 14th signer of the Mayflower Compact; was in the first encounter with the Indians; was a member of Standish's Military Company formed 1621; also served as Governor's Asst. 1633-1636 and was a member of the Council of War for Plymouth colony 1642. He died 1644; married 1st Constance Dudley.
Children of Stephen by 1st wife:
1. Constance Hopkins, b. 1605; m. Nicholas Snow.
2. Giles Hopkins, b. ca 1607; m. Catherine Wheldon (Weldon) Oct. 9, 1639.
Children of Stephen Hopkins and Elizabeth Fisher:
1. Damaris Hopkins, b. 1619; d. young.
2. Oceanus Hopkins, b. 1620 on Mayflower; d. before 1627.
3. Caleb Hopkins, b. 1623.
4. Deborah Hopkins, b. 1625; m. Andrew Ring.
5. Damaris Hopkins, b. 1627.
6. Ruth Hopkins.
7. Elizabeth Hopkins.
MAYFLOWER PASSENGER - GILES or GYLES HOPKINS
Giles Hopkins, (Stephen) came on Mayflower with father; m. Catherine Wheldon Oct. 9, 1639 (Plymouth Colonial Vital Records). She was daughter of Gabruel Wheldon of Yarnouth. Giles died after Mch. 15, 1689, when he made a codicil to this will (Mayflower Descendants I, p. 110) and April 26, 1690, when his will was probated (Mayflower Descendant II, p. 117). His widow survived.
Children of Giles and Catherin Wheldon (Weldon):
1. Mary Hopkins, b. Nov. 1640; m. Samuel Smith Jan. 3, 1665. See Smith.
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From D.A.C. Stephen Hopkins born Eng., was the 14th signer of the Mayflower Compact; was in the first encounter with the Indians; was a member of Standish's Military Company formed 1621; also served as Governor's Asst. 1633-1636 and was a member of the Council of… |
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