Ann Hutchinson Hawkes

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Ann Hutchinson Hawkes

Birth
England
Death
4 Dec 1669 (aged 65–66)
Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Adam Hawkes married (1) by about 1631 Anne (_____) Hutchinson. She died at Lynn on 4 December 1669.
They had two children: John & Susanna (Hawkes) Cogswell.
In 1658 John Hawkes had a running battle with Mr. Joseph Cooke over a horse, and this court contest produced a number of illuminating depositions. On 30 March 1658, "Thomas Hutchson testified that his father-in-law, Adam Hakes, gave to his son, John Hakes, such a colt, and he put it to Isaac Hearte to keep." (Samuel Hutchinson, Francis Hutchinson, Elizabeth (Hutchinson) Hart and Isaac Hart also deposed in this matter, but no relationships were stated in their depositions.)
These depositions and the details of the settlement of the estate of Adam Hawkes make it clear that he married a widow Hutchinson, with five children: Francis, Samuel, Thomas, Edward and Elizabeth. The marriage to Ann (_____) Hutchinson must have taken place in England, but no record of this has been found.
On 29 December 1646, a warrant was issued to the constable of Lynn "to summon Hannah Knight for uncleanness with Isaack Hawkes." No other record has been found for a man of this name. The likely explanation is that Elizabeth Hutchinson, stepdaughter of Adam Hawkes, married at about the time of this summons Isaac Hart, and that the clerk's pen slipped in the record cited above.
The claim has been made that the surname of the wife of Adam Hawkes was Browne. This is certainly possible, but, in the absence of further evidence, there are many other conceivable explanations for the stated relation between the Hawkes and Browne families.
Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project
Adam Hawkes married (1) by about 1631 Anne (_____) Hutchinson. She died at Lynn on 4 December 1669.
They had two children: John & Susanna (Hawkes) Cogswell.
In 1658 John Hawkes had a running battle with Mr. Joseph Cooke over a horse, and this court contest produced a number of illuminating depositions. On 30 March 1658, "Thomas Hutchson testified that his father-in-law, Adam Hakes, gave to his son, John Hakes, such a colt, and he put it to Isaac Hearte to keep." (Samuel Hutchinson, Francis Hutchinson, Elizabeth (Hutchinson) Hart and Isaac Hart also deposed in this matter, but no relationships were stated in their depositions.)
These depositions and the details of the settlement of the estate of Adam Hawkes make it clear that he married a widow Hutchinson, with five children: Francis, Samuel, Thomas, Edward and Elizabeth. The marriage to Ann (_____) Hutchinson must have taken place in England, but no record of this has been found.
On 29 December 1646, a warrant was issued to the constable of Lynn "to summon Hannah Knight for uncleanness with Isaack Hawkes." No other record has been found for a man of this name. The likely explanation is that Elizabeth Hutchinson, stepdaughter of Adam Hawkes, married at about the time of this summons Isaac Hart, and that the clerk's pen slipped in the record cited above.
The claim has been made that the surname of the wife of Adam Hawkes was Browne. This is certainly possible, but, in the absence of further evidence, there are many other conceivable explanations for the stated relation between the Hawkes and Browne families.
Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project


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