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Descendants of Francis Cooke (1583 –1663)

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Profiles

  • Esther Butler (1736 - 1812)
  • Charles Hall (1800 - 1876)
    birth year: 1830 census states 1790-1800 (between 30 and 40yo) 1850 census states 1800 1860 census states 1801 1870 census state 1800 online trees falsely? state 1788 Middle name? S...
  • Sarah Jane Hume (1820 - 1890)
    1850 census, Montgomery County, VA living with husband Silas next door to her parents Charles Hall Death certificate says 56, born in 1832.
  • Giles Ammon Stewart (1858 - 1917)
    1880 Allegheny, Montgomery County, VA census Death certificate of Charles Wade Stewart, Sr.
  • Louisa Ardella Graham (1880 - 1956)
    Missing entry in birth registry for Montgomery County, VA 1880 -- should be around here:

Scope of Project

To build a single, validated and documented shared family tree for the Francis Cooke, "Mayflower" Passenger, family, from earlier origins to near modern times.

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Overview

from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Cooke

Francis Cooke (1583 – April 7, 1663 Plymouth, Massachusetts) was one of the 102 passengers on the Mayflower. This early settler is one of the twenty-six male Pilgrims known to have descendants.

Early life and family

Francis is described in Leiden Walloon church marriage records dating from 1603 as a "woolcomber out of (uyt) England". Johanna W. Trammel, The Pilgrims and other people from the British Isles in Leiden, 1576-1640 (Isle of Man: Mansk-Svenska Publishing Co. Ltd., 1989), p.152 However, his origins are unknown. He could have been a refugee from religious persecution elsewhere in continental Europe.

In Leiden, sometime after July 20, 1603, as Franchoys Couck, he married Hester le Mahieu, the daughter of Protestant refugees from the Walloon Flanders area. Walter J. Harrison, "New Light on Francis Cooke and His Wife Hester Mayhieu and Their Son John," Mayflower Descendant, Vol 27, 145-153. Their betrothal was recorded on July 4 and 5, so the 20th was the soonest the marriage could have taken place after banns were read.</ref> The Mahieus, from Lille, had resided in Canterbury, then London, since the 1570s before moving to Leiden in 1590. Hester le Mahieu's sister was Marie le Mahieu, wife of Jan Lano, another Protestant refugee in Canterbury and then Leiden, whose son, Delano family|Philippe de Lannoy (anglicized to 'Delano') migrated on the Plymouth Colony#Growth of Plymouth|Fortune to join his uncle Francis Cooke and his cousin Robert at Plymouth colony in 1621, having been left behind with twenty others when the Mayflower's sailing mate, the Speedwell (ship)|Speedwell, foundered and returned to port in England leaving the Mayflower to sail alone. Philippe is the progenitor of the branch of the Delano family from which Franklin Delano Roosevelt descends.

While in Leiden, Francis and Hester were members of the Walloon church. In 1606, they left Leiden briefly for Norwich, England, where they joined another Walloon church, returning to Leiden in 1607, possibly for religious reasons. Between 1611 and 1618, the Cookes were members of the Pilgrim Separatist congregation in Leiden. <ref>Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs. "The Pilgrims and other English in Leiden records: some new Pilgrim documents." New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1989, p.195-214. </ref> The Pilgrim church was not established in Leiden until 1609, so Francis was living there long before their arrival and must have met up with and joined them afterwards.

The Mayflower and Plymouth

In 1620, Francis, his son John, and nephew Philippe de Lannoy boarded Speedwell (ship)|Speedwell at Delftshaven. Cooke left wife Hester and their younger children behind to follow when the colony was established. The Leiden Separatists bought the ship in Holland. They then sailed it to Southampton, England to meet the Mayflower, which had been chartered by the merchant investors. In Southampton they joined with other Separatists and the additional colonists hired by the investors.

The two ships began the voyage on August 5, 1620, but the Speedwell leaked badly and had to return to Dartmouth to be refitted at great expense and time. On the second attempt, the two ships sailed about 100 leagues beyond Land's End in Cornwall, but the Speedwell was again found to be leaky. Both vessels returned to Plymouth where the Speedwell was sold. It would later be revealed that there was in fact nothing wrong with the ship. The crew had sabotaged it in order to escape the year long commitment of their contract.

Eleven people from the Speedwell (including Francis and John Cooke) boarded the Mayflower, leaving 20 people (including Robert Cushman and Philippe de Lannoy) to return to London while a combined company of 103 continued the voyage. For a third time, the Mayflower headed for the New World. She left Plymouth on September 6, 1620 and entered Cape Cod Harbor on November 11, 1620. The Fortune eventually followed, arriving at Plymouth Colony one year later on November 9, 1621.

Arriving at what is now Provincetown, Massachusetts, on November 11 (November 21, new-style calendar), forty-one of the passengers, among them Francis Cooke, signed the Mayflower Compact as the boat lay at anchor.

Francis was active in Plymouth civil affairs in the 1630s and 40s - committees to lay out land grants and highways, petit jury, grand jury, coroner's jury. He appears on the 1643 Plymouth list of those able to bear arms. At some point in 1638 or afterward, he settled at Rocky Nook on Jones River, within the limits of Kingston, a few miles from Plymouth.<ref>Robert Charles Anderson, "Francis Cooke", The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, 1995, Vol. I.</ref>

In 1651, fellow Pilgrim William Bradford (1590-1657)|William Bradford wrote of him: "Francis Cooke is still living, a very old man, and hath seen his children's children have children. After his wife came over with other of his children; he hath three still living by her, all married and have five children, so their increase is eight. And his son John which came over with him is married, and hath four children living." William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation 1620-1647, ed. Samuel Eliot Morison (New York: Knopf, 1991), p. 442, 446.

Francis Cooke died in 1663 in Plymouth (town), Massachusetts|Plymouth. Records of the Colony of New Plymouth in New England, Nathaniel B. Shurtleff and David Pulsifer, eds., (Boston 1855-1861), Vol 8, p. 23

Notable Descendants

Claimed by the Francis Cooke Society

  • Notable descendants of Francis Cooke include Cephas Thompson, William D. Washburn|William Drew Washburn, Grandma Moses|Mrs. Anna Mary Robertson ("Grandma Moses"), Orson Welles|(George) Orson Welles, Abel Pierce|Abel Head "Shanghai" Pierce (Texas cattleman who introduced the Brahman cattle breed into Texas), Actor Richard Gere, and Beach Boys Brian Wilson|Brian, Carl Wilson|Carl, and Dennis Wilson.<ref>Famous Descendants of Mayflower Passenger Francis Cooke, Francis Cooke Society</ref>

Other notable descendants

  • Past Presidents George Bush Sr. and Jr. through Experience Mitchell and Janae Cook.

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