(and more from Shirley)
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..... the problem with posting it all as a discussion is that no one who should read it will. They'll fall asleep. Very few who actually have an interest will make it to the end and won't understand what I'm saying anyway. As long as there are errors in the Overview About section putting facts in the Discussion area won't help beginners. Even the "stories" shown on Stephen first page have serious errors and a few large sections are repeated (like two old Wikipedia pages that were cut & pasted) taking up extra room.
Most Newbies don't read below the fold or click on a discussion button but want to contribute what they've found on other trees to the front page without doing any prep. They rush to fill in the all blanks and add stories that make no sense because that's what they think they're supposed to do.
One line on his Overview says
"Married twice. Not sure what order. Other wife unknown."
One line says,
"Same Stephen Hopkins married to Constance Dudley Hopkins and father of Bethia."
Constance DUDLEY has been removed from the bio section at the top and has no business being in the overview section.
Already In the Discussion tab is the HUGE amount of typing that Sally Thomas (v. 78, no. 2, June 2012 The Mayflower Quarterly, by Simon Neal) did back in Oct 2013 from Simon Neal's article that should be emphasized. The article she painstakingly typed out is on line now and the 26 pages of references she mentioned are here also:
https://www.themayflowersociety.org/images/stories/quarterly/nov-ju...
http://tinyurl.com/NEAL-SOURCES
You can use any of my stuff anywhere you want but you'll probably want to cut out a LOT. Please always try to put the two The American Genealogist (TAG) sources on everything you post. These are the guys who found the information or were responsible for the search. Since the Hopkins brick wall didn't come down until 1998 (and more chipped away in 2004) it's easy to say that everything written about Stephen Hopkins'
birth date,
birth place,
parents,
first wife,
siblings, and
made-up children
before 1998 and/or 2004 is wrong.
Here's what you need as references/citations/sources on every page that has anything to do with Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower.
1.
Caleb Johnson, "The True Origins of Mayflower Passenger Stephen Hopkins,"
The American Genealogist, 73(1998):161-171
2.
Ernest M. Christensen, "The Probable Parentage of Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower,"
The American Genealogist, 79(October 2004):241-249
3.
Wikipedia has him more correct than 99% of the trees on the internet, but if we cut and paste old copy (we already have 2 on the front page) then when the info is corrected or editied we're left with old, bad info or errors. Better to just put the URL of the page so people can click to get the newest version and we're all on the same page.
http://tinyurl.com/WIKIPEDIA-Stephen-Hopkins
4,
http://www.americanancestors.org/StaticContent/articles?searchby=to...
Researching the Mayflower -- Sorting the Good from the Bad.
(might have to sign up for free to see it. Not sure)
I think you'll want to put John Hopkins and Elizabeth Williams back as Stephen's parents after you fix all the stuff with John and his other 3 kdis. If you don't someone will come along and put Nicholas Hopkins and Mary Poole as his parents. No joke.
You'll want to fix John Hopkins' son, William, who has an extremely small chance of being the guy possibly born in Worcester who married Helen Vickaris whose daughter Elizabeth married Wakeman. We don't know the birth date or parents of the MP William Hopkins from Ribbesford, Worcester who died there in 1647. No known Hampshire connection.
John and Agnes's son Wm was baptized in Upper Clatford, Hampshire 16 June 1574 according to the LDS index but 16 June 1575 according to the researchers set out by Caleb Johnson (page 166) at
http://tinyurl.com/Johnson-Book
which is quoted from The American Genealogist, 79 (October 2004) pp 241-249.
I've not seen the original record book so don't know which year is correct but I think you know who I'd side with in a tree.
Susanna is correct with bapt 24 June 1584, but is the daughter of Elizabeth Williams, not Agnes Burrow/Barrow/Borrow/e, etc., because Agenes probably died before John married Elizabeth in 1579.
Alice Hopkins is the dau of Agnes. Alice's baptism was 20 March 1576 according to the index as LDS but 20 March 1577/8 according to the research in Hampshire per page 166 at
http://tinyurl.com/Johnson-Book
which is quoted from The American Genealogist, 79 (October 2004) pp 241-249.
We do not have any proof what happened to John Hopkin's son William or his two daughters Alice (didn't marry Gilbert) and Susannah (didn't marry Edward Fuller). Researchers and scholars think that Stephen is probably the man on the Mayflower.
I have no idea where someone got an exact death date for Agnes Borrow/e of 28 April 1579 in Andover. No one I know has seen that death date or town for her death. Andover is close to Upper Clatford but so are a lot of other villages. Hursley, Andover and Upper Clatford are not part of the city of Winchester. It takes 15 or 20 minutes by bus to get to Hursley.
You'll want to fix the birth place of Elizabeth Fisher, Stephen's 2nd wife, and her death date if I remember correctly. U.S. & International Marriage Records 1560-1900 is not a historical document or record. It's a hit on a database compiled by a computer sweep through submittals from people who often are just name collectors. There are at least 6 "US & Int'l Marriage Records" for Stephen and Elizabeth -- all of them different. We know none of them are real. Plus there are at least 6 of them for Constance Dudley so you know where this discussion is going.
A real marriage record has an exact marriage month and date and an exact place that the marriege took plage.
One of my favorite "US & Int'l Marriage Records" (for Stephen to the mythical Constance Dudley shows that he was born in Massachusetts and there's one for Elizabeth that shows she was born in Massachusetts. If we want the actual marriage record for Elizabeth Fisher we have to go to Ancestry (search under Eliza Fisher).
Elizabeth was probably alive when Stephen had the problem with the pregnant servant since it's unlikely a single woman would be living the a widower's household. We know Elizabeth had already died before Stephen wrote his will on 6 June 1644 so the appropriate death range for Elizabeth Fisher would be from Feb 1639 to June 1644 (Bradford said they'd lived there for 20 years).
Easiest place to find PRE-Mayflower info on this family:
http://tinyurl.com/Johnson-Book
Do you work on first wife Mary's page? It says she was born in London and buried in Winchester. The 1 Jan 1580 date is a hold-over from the mythical Constance Dudley and she's listed in the Hursley burial (and probate) records, not Winchester.