
Signing of the Mayflower Compact
'Stephen Hopkins' (born about
1582 –
1644), was a tanner and merchant who was one of the passengers on the ''
Mayflower'' in 1620, settling in
Plymouth Colony. Hopkins was recruited by the
Merchant Adventurers to provide governance for the colony as well as assist with the colony's ventures. He was a member of a group of passengers known to the Pilgrims as "The Strangers". Hopkins was one of forty-one signatories of the
Mayflower Compact and was an assistant to the governor of the colony through 1636.
''Sea Venture'' shipwreck and Mutiny
Hopkins had made a previous attempt to reach the
New World in 1609 aboard the new flagship of the
Virginia Company, the ''
Sea Venture,'' on which Sir
George Somers took the helm. Hopkins had embarked as a Minister's Clerk and the Admiral of the Company. The ship was on the way to the
Jamestown Colony in
Virginia with much needed supplies when it was deliberately driven onto the reefs of
Bermuda to prevent its foundering as a result of the damage it had sustained during a severe storm. All aboard, 150 passengers and crew and a dog, survived. The ''Sea Venture's
longboat was fitted with a mast and sent to find Virginia, but it and its crew were never seen again. Hopkins attempted to start a mutiny while stranded on the island. He was sentenced to death when this was discovered but was eventually set free after complaining of the "ruin of his wife and children". Hopkins and the remaining survivors spent nine months on Bermuda building two smaller ships, the ''Deliverance'' and ''Patience'', from Bermuda cedar and materials salvaged from the ''Sea Venture''. He and the other castaways eventually made their way to Jamestown, where Hopkins appears to have stayed for (some say) two years before returning to England. The Hopkins family is considered one of the
First Families of Virginia. The story of the ''Sea Venture'' shipwreck (and Hopkins' mutiny) is said to be the inspiration for ''
The Tempest'' by
William Shakespeare.
Diplomat and Veteran
In 1621 Hopkins,
Edward Winslow and
William Bradford were delegated by their associates to treat with the
Indians in the Plymouth vicinity on behalf of the
Pilgrims and succeeded in winning the friendship of Chief
Massasoit (1580-1661), concluding a peace treaty on
22 March 1621. He served in the
Pequot War of 1637.
Marriage
1. Mary (maiden name unknown): She may have died while Hopkins was on his first attempt to reach New World.
2. Elizabeth Fisher: married Hopkins at St. Mary Matfellon, Whitechapel, London, on
19 February 1617/8, and was a ''Mayflower'' passenger who died in Plymouth, 1639.
Children
Stephen and Mary had three children:
★ Elizabeth b. England; she more than likely died before the ''Mayflower'' voyage.
★
Constance b. England, 1607; ''Mayflower'' passenger; married
Nicholas Snow, who came to Plymouth on the ship ''Anne'' in 1623; died in
Plymouth Colony, 1677.
★ Giles b. England, 1607/8; ''Mayflower'' passenger, married
Catherine Whelden, daughter of
Gabriel Whelden of
Malden and
Yarmouth
Stephen and Elizabeth had seven children:
★ Damaris b. England, 1618; ''Mayflower'' passenger.
★
Oceanus b. en route to Plymouth on ''Mayflower''.
★ Caleb b. Plymouth, 1623; dead by spring 1651.
★ Elizabeth b. Plymouth, 1623.
★ Deborah b. Plymouth, 1626, married
Andrew Ring, son of William and Mary Ring
★ Damaris b. Plymouth, 1628, married
Jacob Cooke, son of Pilgrim,
Francis Cooke and
Hester Mayhieu (Cooke)
★ Ruth b. Plymouth, 1630.
References
★ Caleb Johnson, ''The American Genealogist'' 73:161-171, “The True English Origins of Stephen Hopkins of the ''Mayflower''”, July 1998. His first wife was ''not'' Constance Dudley, though this erroneous name is given by older references.
★ ''Mayflower Families Through Five Generations,'' Volume Six, Third Edition, Stephen Hopkins ISBN 0-930270-03-7
External links
★
Stephen Hopkins of the ''Mayflower''
★
Stephen Hopkins First encounter marker
★
MayflowerHistory.com page on Stephen Hopkins
★
Stephen Hopkins in the Records of the 17th Century
★
Last Will and Testament of Stephen Hopkins at The Plymouth Colony Archive Project
See also
★
Pilgrims
★
Jamestown, Virginia
★
First Families of Virginia