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Mary Brooke (Baker)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Battell, Sussex, England
Death: November 20, 1634 (27)
Battle, Sussex, England
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Thomas Baker, Esq. and Mary Baker
Wife of Robert Brooke
Mother of Baker Brooke; Mary Brooke; Thomas Brooke; Barbara Brooke; Robert Brooke and 1 other
Sister of George Baker; Thomas Baker; John Baker; Michael Baker; Priscilla Baker and 1 other
Half sister of Mary Jane Baker

Managed by: Keith Neville Bystrom
Last Updated:

About Mary Brooke

Mary Baker (1602-1634) married Robert Brooke.


Robert Brooke married twice to:

  1. (25 Feb 1626/7 London) Mary Baker (b. c. 1602 - d. c. 1634 England), dau.of Thomas Baker of Battle, Sussex, England.[6][7]
  2. (11 May 1635 England) Mary (1611– 63), second dau. of Roger Mainwaring (1582–1653), Dean of Worcester and Bishop of St David's, and Cecilia Proper.[8][9]

He married his first wife Mary Baker, on Shrove Monday (Carnival Monday) in London. After she died, he remarried to Mary Mainwaring, who immigrated with him to Maryland in c. 1650, where three of her children were born: Basil who died on the day of his birth; and twins Eliza and Henry.

children

Mary Baker is the mother of: [3]

  1. Baker Brooke (1628–1679). m.1 Anne (1644 – 1714), dau. of Leonard Calvert, 1st Gov. of Maryland, (1606–47); m.2 Anne Brent
  2. Mary Brooke (b. 1630 - d. ca. 1650 England).
  3. Maj. Thomas Brooke Sr., Esq. (1632–1676). m.1 Eleanor (1642–1725), dau. of Hon. Richard Hatton, Sr. (1605–48); m.2 Margaret [...] (ca. 1610)
  4. Barbara Brooke (1634 - d.y. 1650 England).[10]

Robert was born in Whitemarsh, Southampton on June 23, 1602, and matriculated at Wadham College, Oxford University on April 28, 1618. He received the degree of B.A. July 6, 1620, and M.A. April 20, 1624. He was educated for the ministry and was admitted to “Orders”, but whether he was ever the incumbent of a parish is not shown. However, a manuscript copy of the Visitations of Hampshire in 1634, in the British Museum has under his name the note, “This Robert is a minister”. He resided at his estate in Whitchurch, Hampshire, England.

First marriage

Robert married Mary Baker (1602–34) on February 25, 1627 on Shrove Monday (Carnival Monday) in London. Mary was born on June 3, 1602 in Battle, Sussex. She died in 1634, probably at the birth of her daughter, Barbara.

Mary was the daughter of Thomas Baker II and Mary Engham. Thomas was barrister of Battle, Sussex, England, and his wife Mary, daughter of Sir Thomas Engham, Knight of Goodelstone Kent, England. Battle, Sussex, is the Abbytown of the Great Battle Abbey built by William the Conqueror to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Hastings. Thomas Baker resided at “Goodnestone”, Kent. This Baker family had its family arms registered at the Visitation of 1619. They were described as “Argent, a tower between three keys erect sable”. Crest: “On a tower sable an arm embowed in mail holding a piece of flint stone proper”.

Robert and Mary (Baker) Brooke had four children: Baker, Mary, Thomas, and Barbara. Mary died in 1634, probably at the time of her fourth child.

Second marriage

Robert married secondly on May 11, 1635, Mary Mainwaring (1611–63). Mary was the second daughter of Rt Rev Roger Mainwaring (1582–53), the Doctor of Divinity, Dean of Worcester and Bishop of St David's, and his wife, Cecilia Proper. Roger was heavily fined by Parliament for his advocacy of the doctorine of Divine Right of Kings. The Mainwarings were of ancient and noble family allied by marriage with the family of Hugh Kivelioc de Meschines. The family is an ancient armorial one of Cheshire which used the following arms: “Argent, two bars gules”. Crest: “Out of a ducal coronet an ass’ head haltered proper”. Motto: “Devant, si je puis”.

Immigrates to Maryland

Owing to family prestige and personal worth, Robert commanded much influence, and a commission was issued him at London, September 20, 1649, as a Commander of a County in Maryland, to be newly erected. He had an agreement with Cecilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore (1605–75), to receive a manor of 2,000 acres (8 km²) for every ten persons he transported. Robert and Cecilius were friends while both attended Oxford.

Robert immigrated from Cheshire, England to Maryland on June 30, 1650 aboard his own ships and at his own expense, along with his second wife, ten children, 21 men servants, seven maid servants and a pack of hounds. On July 22, 1650, along with his two sons, Baker and Thomas, Sr., he took the oath of Fidelity to the Proprietor. His sons each received separate grants of land in various counties of Maryland. Robert was constituted as Commander of newly formed Charles County in Maryland on October 30, 1650.

Becomes Governor of Maryland

When the Puritans ascended in 1652, under the Cromwellian Government, Robert was made head of Provisional Council of Maryland. He served in this capacity from March 29 to July 3, 1652. He was one of the five commissioners making up this Council, which was the government of Maryland. During this period, he served as the Council’s President, which was analogous to being Lieutenant-General or Governor of the Province. Robert’s cooperation with the Bennett-Claiborne Puritan faction from 1652–54 brought him the displeasure of Lord Baltimore and the loss of his proprietary offices. Later he allied himself with the conservative Catholic Party. It is thought that he died a Roman Catholic, although no documentation has been found to prove this assertion. His second wife, Mary Mainwaring, was definitely a member of the Roman faith, and most of his sons professed Roman Catholicism.

Property of Robert Brooke

Robert was a large landowner. One of his estates was patented on July 28, 1650, and was termed “De La Brooke Manor”. It was surveyed on November 21, 1650, and consisted of 2,000 acres (8 km²) in Resurrection Hundred, St. Mary's County, Maryland. “De La Brooke” was torn down in 1835 and the present house having already been built in 1830 remains in its spot. It is located about 20 miles up the west bank of the Patuxent River, in what is now St. Mary's County.

In 1652 Robert removed to “Brooke Place Manor” 2,100 acres (8.5 km²) on Battle Creek, Leonard’s Creek Hundred, Calvert County, across the Patuxent, where he built a home almost a replica of “De La Brooke”.[1] This tract had been surveyed on November 30, 1650 for Robert. In addition, Robert also had “Brooke Court” surveyed which constituted 2,000 acres (8 km²) in what is now Prince George’s Co, Maryland. As Manor Lord of “De La Brooke Manor”, "Brooke Place Manor”, and “Brooke Court”, he was granted Court Leet and Court Baron. At the time of his death on July 20, 1655 at “Brooke Place”,[2] Robert had accumulated 8,000 acres (32 km²) of land. Robert established a very prominent political family, the first to have third and fourth generation members holding provincial offices.

Robert was listed in the 1634 Visitation of Hampshire, with the following arms, “Checky or and azure on a bend gules a lion passant”. Crest: “A demi-lion rampant erased or”. The family was also entitled to quarter their arms with that of Twyne, described as “Sable a fesse embattled argent, in chief two estoiles of the last”.

Children with first wife Mary Baker

Baker Brooke (1628-1679), who married Anne Calvert (1644-1714), daughter of Gov. Leonard Calvert (1606-1647), 1st Governor of Maryland and Anne Brent.

Mary Brooke (1630-ca. 1650), who died young in England.

Maj. Thomas Brooke, Sr., Esq. (1632-1676), who married Eleanor Hatton (1642-1725), daughter of Hon. Richard Hatton, Sr. (1605-1648) and Margaret (ca. 1610).

Barbara Brooke (1634-ca. 1650), who died young in England.

Children with second wife

Charles Brooke (1636-1671), never married.

Roger Brooke (1637-1700), who married:

Dorothy Neale, daughter of Capt. James Neale (ca. 1615-1684) and Anna Maria Gill; Mary Wolseley, daughter of Walter Wolseley and Mary Beauchamp.

Robert Brooke, Jr. (1639-1667), who married Elizabeth Thompson, daughter of William Thompson and Mary Bretton.

John Brooke (1640-1677), who married Rebecca Isaacs.

Mary Brooke (1642).

William Brooke (1643).

Ann Brooke (1645), who married Christopher Beanes (ca. 1650-1696).

Francis Brooke (1648-1671), never married.

Basil Brooke (d. 1651), who died in infancy.

Henry Brooke (1655-1672), never married.

Elizabeth Brooke (1655), who married Capt. Richard Smith, Jr. (ca. 1660-1714), son of Lt. Richard Smith, Sr., Gent. (d.ca. 1690) and his wife, Eleanor.

Ancestry

Robert Sr., was the son of Hon. Thomas Brooke (1561-1612) and Susan Foster (ca. 1570-1612).

Susan was the daughter of Sir Thomas (Forster) Foster V (1548-1612) of “Etherstone”, Hertford, England, and his wife, Susan Foster (1548-1625), co-heiress with her sister Constance.

Thomas was the son of Richard Brooke, Sr., Gent., Esq. (1519-1594) and Elizabeth Twyne (1523-1599).

Richard was the son of Robert Brooke (d. 1593).

Notes

Maryland Historical Magazine, pp 68

Taney, p 25, gives date of death

References

  1. Taney, Roger Brooke (1872). Memoir of Roger Brooke Taney, LL.D.: Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. John Murphy & Co..
  2. (1906) Maryland Historical Magazine. Maryland Historical Society. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
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Mary Brooke's Timeline

1607
February 25, 1607
Battell, Sussex, England
1628
November 16, 1628
Battle, Sussex, England
1630
February 19, 1630
Battle, Sussex, England
1632
June 23, 1632
June 23, 1632
Battle, Sussex, England
1634
November 20, 1634
Age 27
Battle, Sussex, England
1634
Battle, Sussex, England
1639
April 21, 1639
London, Middlesex, England