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Topic: Thomas Rogers (Mayflower Pilgrim)


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In the News (Fri 17 Feb 12)

  
  Thomas Rogers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Thomas Rogers was the son of William and Eleanor Rogers, and grandson of William and Joan Rogers.
Thomas' marriage to Alice Cosford and his children's baptisms are all found in the parish registers of Watford, Northampton, England.
Thomas Rogers became a citizen of Leyden on 25 June 1618 with sponsors William Jepson and Roger Wilson, and is called a Camlet-merchant.
members.aol.com /calebj/rogers.html   (338 words)

  
 The Descendants of Thomas and Hannah (Annable) Bowerman - Person Page 152
The Descendants of Thomas and Hannah (Annable) Bowerman
Thomas was a passenger on the ship Mayflower of 1620 and a signer of the "Mayflower Compact." He immigrated on 11 November 1620 to Plymouth, MA., New England from Leiden, Holland, with his eldest son, Joseph, leaving behind his wife and younger children.
Roger Wilson, formerly of Sandwich, Kent Co., England (M)      Roger Wilson, formerly of Sandwich, Kent Co., England witnessed the citizenship of Thomas Rogers on 25 June 1618 at Leidon, Holland.
hawkshome.net /html/p152.htm   (4348 words)

  
 TENTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Giles ROGERS was born in 1643 in Edinburg, Scotland.
Giles Rogers, born 1643-5, in Edinburgh, Scotland, died in 1730, nephew of Thomas Rogers the Mayflower Pilgrim, came to Virginia in 1670 and again in 1680.
Senator Joseph Rogers Underwood was the grandfather of Oscar Underwood, the present Senator from Alabama, and Leader of the Democratic party.
home.amaonline.com /genealogy/nrogers/d66.htm   (3960 words)

  
 Mayflower History
Among those attending the 75th Anniversary dinner of the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the State of New Hampshire at Concord on November 5, 2005 were: Dean Dexter, deputy governor, former society Governors Edward F.
Nearly 400 years after a peace treaty was signed by their ancestors, direct descendents of Pilgrim Governor William Bradford and Chief Massasoit, met in Concord to celebrate the rich place both families have in American history, as well as the special relationship native Americans had with the first white settlers in New England.
Mayflower Society Governor Carlton Bradford notes the treaty between Massasoit and his ancestor, William Bradford, signed in 1621, lasted 50 years and is testimony to the respect the two peoples maintained during the birth of the European settlement.
www.mv.com /ipusers/lionmedia/mayflower_history.html   (937 words)

  
 MayflowerHistory.com
Mayflower Families: Thomas Rogers for Five Generations, contains the best, most thorough and completely researched genealogy on Thomas Rogers.
Thomas Rogers was born in Watford, Northampton, England, the son of William and Eleanor Rogers.
Thomas Rogers died the first winter at Plymouth, leaving behind his 18-year old son Joseph.
www.mayflowerhistory.com /Passengers/ThomasRogers.php   (285 words)

  
 Thomas Rogers
Thomas Rogers became a citizen of Leyden, Holland on 25 June 1618 with sponsors William Jepson, formerly of Worksop, Notts., and by Roger Wilson, formerly of Sandwich, Kent Co. England, and is called a Camlet-merchant.
Thomas Rogers died in the first sickness but his son Joseph is still living (1650) and is married and hath six children.
Many have claimed for Thomas other male descendants, none of which had been proved by the publication date of Mayflower Family Volume Two, Thomas Rogers, and it is there noted one has been disproved, i.e., William Rogers of Connecticut and Long Island.
homepage.mac.com /davewells/ps11/ps11_220.htm   (536 words)

  
 The Mayflower Society: General Society of Mayflower Descendants
Anyone who arrived in Plymouth on Mayflower and survived the initial hardships is now considered a Pilgrim with no distinction being made on the basis of their original purposes for making the voyage.
The Mayflower Pilgrims and their fellow travelers were authors of the first true governing document created in a New World colony.
The Mayflower Compact is considered to have set the stage for the Constitution of the United States.
www.mayflower.org /pilgrim.htm   (368 words)

  
 Mayflower Passengers
One in 1620 carried the Pilgrim Fathers to New Plymouth; one in 1629 carried Higginson's party to Salem; and one in 1630 carried Winthrop's party to Charlestown.
She married, at Plymouth, about 1636, Thomas Cushman, who was born in February, 1608, and died at Plymouth, 22 December 1691.
Rogers, Thomas Birth by about 1572, son of William and Eleanor (____) Rogers of Watford, Northamptonshire.
www.mayflowerfamilies.com /mayflower/mayflower_passenger_list.htm   (2592 words)

  
 MY MAYFLOWERS
Although Thomas Rogers died within the first few months after arriving in Plymouth, he was a great force in the movement to the New World from England.
Thomas was successful enough to have purchased, apparently, shares in the Virginia Company of London as early as 1609.
Rogers became a frequent visitor, along with the other "Mayflower Planters" and their close friends in 1619 to the house of Sir Edwin Sandy near "Aldersgate." Later, nearer the final decision time, they met at Mr Ferrar's house in St. Sithe's Lane.
members.tripod.com /~MEJPA/MYMAYFLOWERS.html   (1935 words)

  
 mayflower
Came over on the Mayflower with only one of his children, his wife and other children came over in 1623.
The Mayflower was, most famously, the ship which transported the Pilgrim Fathers from Plymouth, England to North Virginia in what was later to become the United States of America in 1620.
Details regarding the size and overall dimensions of the ship are unknown, but it has been estimated from its load weight and the usual size of 180-ton merchant ships in the period to be 90 - 110 feet in length and about 25 feet in width.
www.sunnytees.com /mayflower.html   (484 words)

  
 Cape Cod National Seashore:   Heritage:   Pilgrims
When King James came along, the Pilgrims thought they might finally be able to ask for permission to set up their own church.
But the King denied the request, and the Pilgrims decided to leave England and move to Holland, where freedom of religion was accepted.
The Pilgrim group had permission to settle in the northern part of Virginia (which in those days reached to present day New York).
www.nps.gov /caco/heritage/pilgrims.html   (708 words)

  
 Mayflower Pilgrim   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Mayflower (comics) - Mayflower is a fictional character in the DC Universe, a superheroine part of the Force of July.
He became one of the early leaders of the English Separatists, minister of the Pilgrims, and is regarded (along with Robert Browne) as one of the founders of the Congregational Church.
Mayflower - The Mayflower was the ship which transported the Pilgrims from Plymouth, England to "North Virginia" (in what was later to become the part of United States of America) in 1620, leaving...
pl65.3rdfaze.info /mayflowerpilgrim.html   (789 words)

  
 Mayflower Art- American History Poster The Eagle Flies Free in Enduring Freedom - Artwork, Learning Tool
Seeking religious freedom during the reign of King James I, the Pilgrims were a group of people who came to America to escape the oppression of England.
The group made the tough trip in the Mayflower with great anticipation of the New World bursting with religious freedom and opportunity.
The Pilgrim's celebration of the first Thanksgiving has grown to become a treasured national holiday.
www.eaglefliesfree.com /mayflower.htm   (550 words)

  
 KSHE-Classic-mp3s - The Mayflower Compact
The Mayflower Compact was the first agreement for self-government to be created and enforced in America.
The Pilgrim leaders persuaded 41 of the male adults aboard the ship to sign an agreement which would set up a government in Plymouth Colony.
On December 26 the Pilgrims on the Mayflower reached the site of modern day Plymouth, Massachusetts and decided to make this land their new home.
www.angelfire.com /music5/misfitelf2/mayflower_compact.htm   (343 words)

  
 The Romantic Story of the Mayflower Pilgrims, by Albert Addison
This is written in a Pilgrim cell, one of those dark and narrow dungeons which the Pilgrim Fathers tenanted three hundred and four years ago, in the autumn of 1607, and behind the heavy iron bars of which men have for generations delighted to be locked in memory of their lives and deeds.
When the Mayflower left them to return home in the spring, the settlers must have felt they were desolate indeed, for their nearest civilised neighbours were five hundred miles to the north and south of them, the French at Nova Scotia and the English in Virginia.
At last the pilgrims said farewell to a town crowded with precious memories and entrained for Lincoln, where their welcome by the Free Churches and Cathedral authorities was in keeping with that extended to them everywhere on theirroute.
etext.lib.virginia.edu /users/deetz/Plymouth/addisontxt.html   (15364 words)

  
 [No title]
As for the older girls on the Mayflower: Mary Chilton, Constance Hopkins, and Elizabeth Tilley were all aged thirteen; and no doubt became good friends with one another on the two month voyage of the Mayflower.
By the age of thirteen, these girls would have helped their mothers with the cooking, sewing and laundering--but there really was little "women's work" to do on the Mayflower and much of the day was spent simply trying to pass time.
John Howland signed the Mayflower Compact, and to do so he would have had to be at least 18 years old, and probably 21.
members.tripod.com /~PMD40/Mayflower.html   (1664 words)

  
 Mayflower Compact 1620   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Thomas Rogers (Mayflower Pilgrim) - Thomas Rogers, a Mayflower Pilgrim and one of 41 signotories of the Mayflower Compact was among those who did not survive that first harsh Plymouth, Massachusetts winter of 1620/1621.
Mayflower Compact - The Mayflower Compact was the first governing document of Plymouth Colony.
1595–1679) was a signer of the Mayflower Compact, and one of the original 102 Pilgrims that arrived on the Mayflower to Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1620.
pl65.3rdfaze.info /mayflowercompact1620.html   (733 words)

  
 Mayflower descendants proud to trace their Pilgrim lineage (November 23, 2006)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
She is a lifelong member of the Mayflower society.
To be considered a descendant, documented proof of lineage must be traced back to one of the 29 Pilgrims - 26 men and three women - who left known descendants, according to a Mayflower society spokesman.
Thomas Rogers' son was a founder of the town of Eastham, Taylor said.
www.capecodonline.com /cctimes/mayflowerdescendants23.htm   (841 words)

  
 Mayflower, the original   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The Mayflower left Harwich, England November 10, 1620 with her Master and Captain, Christopher Jones.
The Mayflower departed "Cape Cod" on April 5, 1621.
Total of 102 passengers 54 died on board, immediately after, during the first sickness and/or winter, or within the first year 45 remained and survived.
www.packrat-pro.com /mayflower.htm   (138 words)

  
 The Pilgrim John Howland Society - Links
The Pilgrim Society — Founded in 1820 “to ensure a continuing and expanded appreciation of the Pilgrims and their contributions to the American Heritage.” Operates the 1824 Pilgrim Hall Museum, the oldest public museum in the United States featuring Pilgrim artifacts.
Pilgrim Archives in Leiden — Leiden is well known as the City of Refugees.
The Pilgrims and Plymouth Colony: 1620 —; A study guide prepared by Duane A. Cline for use by teachers, students, and anyone interested in learning more about the Pilgrims and their Pokanoket friends and the Wampanoag Nation.
www.pilgrimjohnhowlandsociety.org /links.shtml   (1633 words)

  
 Finding Mayflower Families
Most of us, since we were children, have heard of the Mayflower, the Pilgrims, and that first Thanksgiving.
If you are descended from a Mayflower family, then you may be eligible for membership in The General Society of Mayflower Descendants.
George Ernest Bowman is the founder of the Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants and was the editor of the Mayflower Descendant until 1937.
www.genealogymagazine.com /finmayfam.html   (949 words)

  
 The passenger list of the Mayflower, the Pilgrim Fathers, their families and their fate, where known.
The passenger list of the Mayflower, the Pilgrim Fathers, their families and their fate, where known.
A full list of the Pilgrim Fathers and other passengers who were on board the Mayflower.
Rogers, Thomas Birth by about 1572, son of William and Eleanor Rogers of Watford, Northamptonshire.
www.mayflowersteps.co.uk /pilgrim/who.html   (1795 words)

  
 Books and Educational Materials offered by The Mayflower Society
The Mayflower Society publishes the majority of its books as a result of an ongoing program to identify the first five generations of Pilgrim descendants.
The time period these books cover is usually from about the time of the Mayflower landing, in 1620, through the era of the American Revolution.
Her far-sighted and persevering guidance has led to the compilation of this accurate, evolving record of the Pilgrim Families.
www.mayflower.org /book.htm   (879 words)

  
 barrows pilgrim mayflower - 1st barrow   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Chart for John ROGERS Descendant Chart for Thomas ROGERS [Mayflower Pilgrim] Hannah RICHMOND married Nathaniel Barrows.1 Hannah RICHMOND was...
The Mayflower and Pilgrim Story: Chapters from Rotherhithe and Southwark Author: Mary...
Ruth Doolittle Wright, is a direct descendent of John Howland, Pilgrim of the Mayflower, and a...
barrow.zapimone.info /dir5/barrows-pilgrim-mayflower.html   (379 words)

  
 Missouri Society Eligibility
Any person who is able to document their line of descent from one or more of the passengers on the Mayflower voyage, which terminated at Plymouth, New England, in December 1620 is eligible to apply for membership.
These publications about the Mayflower passengers are not yet complete to the fifth generation, but that is the goal.
Books from the General Society of Mayflower Descendents and the lineages of previous members are your greatest source of acceptable materials.
www.ssttcccc.com /mayflower/application.htm   (555 words)

  
 The Mayflower and Her Log, Complete, by Azel Ames   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Thomas Rogers and his son are reputed of the Leyden company.
Thomas Tinker, wife, and son are not certainly known to have been of the
Pilgrims were lifted from the canal into a broad receptacle for vessels,
www.titanic-nautical.com /E-Books/MayflowerAndHerLog/Page_00003.htm   (3604 words)

  
 THE MAYFLOWER
The Mayflower sailed from England on the 16th of September, 1620, with 102 passengers.....
Timothy Winslow is the son of Joseph Winslow, who was the son of John Winslow who arrived on the ship Fortune in 1621, and Mary Chilton, a Mayflower immigrant, who arrived on the Mayflower in 1620 as a 13 year old girl with her parents.......
Thomas Rogers was a signer of the "Mayflower Compact".
www.immigrantships.net /newcompass/ships/ship_files/mayflower.html   (988 words)

  
 Sail1620 - Discover History: Pilgrim Trades   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Pilgrims and Wampanoag: The Prudence of Bradford and Massasoit
Our Mayflower ancestors were not of “royal blood.” For the most part, they were what we now would call “middle class” people who had to work for a living.
This is one more than what was known in January 1999 because the Pilgrim John Howland Society has discovered an Indenture dated 1623 that reveals John Howland’s trade: salter.
www.sail1620.org /discover_feature_pilgrim_trades.shtml   (790 words)

  
 The Mayflower Compact — Infoplease.com
Mayflower Compact - Mayflower Compact, in U.S. colonial history, an agreement providing for the temporary government of...
The Mayflower - The Mayflower The Pilgrims' progress was forwarded by this hearty English vessel Source: The...
The Mayflower Compact: the Pilgrims would not survive in the New World unless they learned how to get along with each other.(AMERICAN......
www.infoplease.com /ipa/A0101029.html   (337 words)

  
 Mayflower Compact   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
On November 11, 1620, before they came ashore on Cape Cod, the Mayflower passengers made an agreement to join together as a “civil body politic.” They also agreed to submit to the government which would be chosen by common consent, and to obey all laws made for the common good of the colony.
No one knows if he copied it from the original document or not, but it included the names of all male heads of families, the free single men and three of the male servants.
John Quincy Adams, described the agreement in 1802 as “the only instance in human history of that positive, original social compact,” which many believed to be the only legitimate source for government.
www.plimoth.org /learn/history/colonists/MayflowerCompact.asp   (377 words)

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