Giles
Hopkins came to Plymouth Colony as a boy of about 12 on the Mayflower with his father Stephen,
step-mother Elizabeth, sister Constance, and half-sister Damaris. His
half-brother Oceanus was born during the passage. Giles is my 11th
great-grandfather on my Grandmother Mildred (Booth) Rollins’ side of the
family. His name is also spelled Gyles in records. I wrote about his father
Stephen Hopkins here.
Giles
was born in Hursley, Hampshire,
England before
30 January 1607/08, when he was baptized. Caleb Johnson found the record, which
is written in Latin. The Latin version of his name is Egidius.
In
1637 the Pequots, a tribe of from Eastern Connecticut,
commenced war with the English there, and Plymouth Colony decided to send a
company to assist in the overthrow of the Indians. Giles and his father and
brother Caleb volunteered to go out in the company, but before they left the Connecticut men
overthrew the Indians so they were not needed.
Giles
moved to Yarmouth
in late 1638 or early 1639. It is supposed when his father Stephen Hopkins in
obtained land to winter his cattle at Yarmouth,
then Mattacheese, that Giles went to care for the cattle. Giles was in Yarmouth
in 1639 when he, along with Hugh Tilley and Nicholas Sympkins
"deposed" to the last will and testament of Peter Warden, the elder,
Giles lived in an area of a cluster of homes called Stony Cove, Mill Pond (not
the Mill Pond off Follins Pond). It is believed that his home was the first
English house to be built below Sandwich. He
sold the homestead to Andrew Hallett Jr. in 1642.
Giles wasn’t a Yarmouth
resident for long, but he was there long enough to become acquainted with his future wife Catherine
Whelden.
Giles
and Catherine were married at Plymouth
on 9 October 1639. Giles was about 31 years old. Catherine was the daughter of Gabriel Whelden of Malden
and Yarmouth.
She was born before 6 March 1616/17, when she was baptized at Basford, Nottinghamshire, England.
In 1641, Rev. Lothrop wrote in his diary that Barnstable constable William Carsley was excommunicated from the church because he made homosexual advances toward Giles Hopkins on three separate occasions.
Giles and Andrew Hallot were surveyors in Yarmouth in 1642. In that same year, Giles successfully sued Walter Devell for non-payment for nine bushels of corn. He was not listed on Yarmouth's men able to bear arms in 1643, so he had likely moved to Barnstable by that time.
Giles
and Catherine moved to Nauset (Eastham) by 1650, as he was then occupying the
position of surveyor of highways, which he served again in 1662 and 1671. He served on a jury in 1667, when a child kept by John Smalley was found dead in the woods. They lived along what is now Tonset Road in Orleans near Town Cove and stayed there for the rest of their lives. Giles' sister Constance and her husband Nicholas Snow also lived in Eastham.
Map of early Orleans settlers |
Giles
and Katharine had 10 children, with two dying in infancy. Their births were
recorded at Eastham, although some were born earlier in Yarmouth:
1.
Mary, born November 1640, probably Yarmouth,
married Samuel Smith, died Eastham (now Orleans)
2 July 1700.
2.
Stephen, born September 1642, probably Yarmouth, married Mary Merrick and Bethia
Linnell, died in Harwich (now Brewster) 10 October 1718
3.
John, born and died in 1643, probably Yarmouth
4.
Abigail, October 1644, probably Yarmouth,
married William Merrick
5.
Deborah, born June 1648 in Eastham, married Josiah Cookie,
died between 28 February 1686/87-7 December 1727, probably Eastham
6.
Caleb, born January 1650/51, Eastham, married Mary Williams, died before
22 May 1728 in Truro
7.
Ruth, born June 1653, Eastham. A Ruth Hopkins married Samuel Mayo at
Eastham on 26 May 1681, but it is not known if it is this Ruth.
8.
Joshua, born June 1657, Eastham. He married Mary Cole and died between
1734 – 1738, in Eastham (now Orleans)
9.
William, born 09 January 1660/61, Eastham. Did not marry.
10. Elizabeth,
born and died in 1664, Eastham
I
descend from their daughter Deborah Hopkins. Her husband Josiah was not a
descendant of Francis Cooke of the Mayflower, although I descend from Francis
through a different line.
For some
unknown reason his father made Caleb, his younger son by his second wife, heir
apparent in his will, giving Caleb all of his real estate. Giles did receive his father's "great bull." Soon after his
father's death in 1644, Caleb gave a very large tract of land to Giles, his
only surviving brother, in what is now Brewster. Upon the death of Caleb, who
was a seaman who died unmarried at Barbados before 1657, Giles came into
possession of large tracts of land.
In
1659 Giles had land granted him at Eastham. In 1662 he was given liberty by the
court to look out for land for his own between Bridgewater and Bay Line. In 1672 he
purchased Sampson's Neck in what is now Orleans,
then called Indians Weesu Neck, with Jonathan Sparrow and Thomas Mayo. It was a
valuable piece of land as it was between Higgins' River on the north and Potonumecot River on the south.
On
15 June 1653 he and Nicholas Snow (his brother-in-law) laid out 20 acres of
meadow to settlers; he received 3 acres. He relinquished land on west side of
Stony Brook, Harwich 25 February 1768 because of border dispute with Yarmouth. The east
boundary line was determined in 1682 by agents, included Giles.
Historians
have surmised that Giles was a quiet, private man, caring little for public
positions. He was in 1654 drawn into a lawsuit by the noted William Leveridge,
who had defamed him. Giles claimed damages to the amount of 50 pounds and
Leveridge was ordered to pay 2 pounds and some shillings for the offense.
Giles
died in Eastham between 5 March 1688/9, when he wrote a codicil to his will,
and 16 April 1690, when his will was proven. He would have been in his early
80s. His will is recorded in the Probate Records of Barnstable County, Vol I,
page 32 and has been printed in the Mayflower Descendant. He did not
leave bequests to any of his daughters, although some of them were still
living.
He
left upland and meadow at Satuckit in Eastham to son Stephen, as well as half
his livestock. He also instructed the other half of his stock of cattle be used
to maintain son William Hopkins during his natural life in a comfortable decent
manner, which seems to indicate William had a physical or psychological
challenge.
Sons
Caleb and Joshua were to receive lands at Palmet (Pamet) and at Samsons Neck,
equally divided.
Wife
Catorne (sic) and son William were to receive meadow at head of Rock Harbor--2
acres to wife and half of that to William. After their decease it would go to
son Joshua. Joshua also received meadow at Rock Harbor.
Son Caleb received meadow at Little Nameskeket.
Giles
left his house and half the land and half the orchard to his wife, which was to to go to son Joshua at her
death. The other half of the land was to go to Joshua at time of Giles' death. Also left
plow irons to Caleb and Joshua, cart and wheels to Joshua, other half stock and
moveables to wife and son William.
He
appointed Stephen Hopkins as his executor. Witnessed by Jonathan Sparrow and
Samuel Knowles. Bore Giles' mark with a seal.
Codicil
written on 15 March 1688/9 asked that because of his age and disability of body
that he could not provide for his own support and that of his wife, so that his
son Stephen Hopkins shall possess and enjoy all stock and moveable goods
provided he take care of his parents' care during their natural lives. Witnessed
by Mark Snow and Jonathon Sparrow.
Giles
Hopkins is buried at Cove Burying Ground in Eastham, but without a surviving
headstone. There is a memorial stone placed there by his descendants in 1966.
It is not known when Catherine died but it was after March 1688/89, when she
was named in her husband’s will.
Descendants of Giles Hopkins may be interested in learning about the Pilgrim Hopkins Society at pilgrimhopkins.com.
Sources
Not Listed Above:
John
D. Austin, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations Stephen Hopkins, 1995
Caleb
Johnson, The True Origin of Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower, The
American Genealogy, July 1998
Robert
Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins, 1995
Marion Vuillieumier, The Town of Yarmouth, Mass.,
A History, 1989
Josiah
Paine, Early Settlers of Eastham, Book 2, Library of Cape Cod History and Genealogy, No. 32, 1916
Roger King,Cape Cod and Plymouth Colony in the 17th Century, 1994