He had two sons and four daughters. Judith, the eldest child, was born in 1592 (christened November 7), before his decade of captivity. (He did not mention her in his will because she was already married off and well provided for.)
The two sons were John and Richard, in that order (there was no Edward), and the other daughters were Margaret, Joane and Mary. John was almost of age, and his father speculated that he might " betake himself to lyve either at the Innes of Courte or at the universities of Oxford or Cambridge"; Richard was younger; none of the three youngest daughters had reached the age of sixteen.
General notice to all and sundry: GEDCOMs are *NOT* reliable documentation - they don't really count as documentation at all. They're just another form of family tree, with all the problems involved.
*PRIMARY* documentation (i.e contemporary or near-contemporary documents, explicitly naming the person(s) involved) are best.
Well-sourced *secondary* documentation, that relies on and cites as much primary documentation as possible, is second-best. (But be careful, there were/are some clever charlatans out there!)
Family trees, GEDCOMs and the like are at best signposts for a general direction (and at worst totally wrong and misleading).
This is the result of the GEDCOM bug that resulted in a specific large GEDCOM being merged in. I encountered this in New England Great Migration families that were stable and MPed for a decade. We're going to suffer from the side effects for awhile.
Keep pointing out when you find these issues and we can all pitch in. I alerted Erica of this thread and she addressed some of the things you mentioned, even though she was not the curator. I am too overloaded for the next couple of days to do much, but I can help later in the week.
Unfortunately the person who triggered this problem has gone away with her feelings badly hurt. Wish she had been more careful in her research, and/or that Geni had not opened the floodgates so wide. :-(
Got a bug with this profile: Richard Hawkins, II
He has a ghost mother that can't be merged with Judith Hele because everything's all locked up.
I claim this line to Admiral John Hawkins.
Gary Wayne Wells b: 1951 - Harvey Edwin Wells b: 1923 - Joseph Aaron Wells b: 1881 - Nathan Henry Wells b: 1848 - William Aaron Wells b: between 1812/1814 - John Boyd Jr. Wells b: between 1790/1900 - John Boyd Sr. Wells b: 1770 - Margret Wells (born Hawkins) b: 1772 - William Hawkins b: 1749 - Robert Hawkins Twin, b: 1717 - Robert Hawkins b: 1691 - Richard John Hawkins III b: 1648 - Richard John Hawkins II b: 1605 - Admiral Sir Richard Hawkins - Admiral John Hawkins b: 1532 - Captain William Hawkins b: 1555
Gary W. Wells
FTDNA #247173
Your "Richard John" Hawkinses are probably figments of someone's overactive imagination. Middle names were *extremely* rare before the mid-18th century, and were not used in the Admiral Hawkins line until a bit later than that (c. 1770s, and still rare even then).
Admiral Sir Richard Hawkins had a son John (b. 1604) AND a son Richard (b. 1605). But John's line daughtered out two generations later (no surviving grandsons who had sons, just daughters), and Richard's was continued through - and ONLY through - a son Nicholas.
No Nicholas, no connection.
The joker in the deck is that there are scads of false claims to this line, and some of them sound plausible unless you know the line really well. "Hawkins" was and is a fairly common name, and some Hawkinses emigrated to America and elsewhere - but none who did so in the 17th or 18th century have been found to have any connection to the Admirals' line.