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The Doane Family and Lineage accept Constance Snow Doane as a descendant of the Stephen Hopkins family. The only Society that does not accept the Constables' testimony is the Mayflower Society. As far as the Doanes are concerned, Constance Snow was the granddaughter of Stephen Hopkins who was on the Mayflower along with other family members ...
Constance Hopkins, 14, daughter by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire). Damaris Hopkins, 1–2, daughter. (She died soon in Plymouth Colony and her parents later had another daughter with the same name.) Oceanus Hopkins, born on board the Mayflower while en route to the New World. Margesson, Edmund* (possibly Norfolk). [34] [self-published source?]
Most likely buried ashore. Memorial in Provincetown. Signer of the Mayflower Compact. Richard Clarke* John Crackstone Sr.* Thomas English* hired to master a shallop but died in the winter. Moses Fletcher* Edward Fuller* John Goodman*, there are conflicting reports regarding Goodman's death, with records of his name appearing in 1623; William ...
She was about 23 years old and the wife of Pilgrim William Bradford, having married him in Holland in 1613 when she was 16. She had one son, John, who did not travel on the Mayflower. On December 7/17, she possibly slipped, falling from the deck of the Mayflower and drowning in the icy water of Cape Cod harbor. This happened while her husband ...
Banks believed the Hopkins family emigration caused Nicholas Snow to follow. But since burial records for St. Leonard's have become available we see that the child baptized 25 January 1599/1600 was buried three days later and could not be the husband of Constance Hopkins. He is listed in the 1623 land division as "Nicolas Snow."
Curtin told Janney, "We have a hat that descended through your ancestor, Stephen Hopkins's daughter, Constance. It is from the early 17th century." Janney was blown away by the hat as she joked, "Wow.
Stephen Hopkins (fl. 1579 – d. 1644) [2] was an English adventurer to the Virginia Colony and Plymouth Colony.Most notably, he was a passenger on the Mayflower in 1620, one of 41 signatories of the Mayflower Compact, and an assistant to the governor of Plymouth Colony through 1636. [3]
He married Sarah Faunce on February 26, 1662/3 and had eleven children. Her death is unknown. John was born about 1638 and died May 8, 1701, in Plymouth. He married: 1. Elizabeth Cooke by 1668 and had nine children. Her mother was a daughter of Mayflower passenger Stephen Hopkins and her father was a son of Mayflower passenger and pilgrim ...