Person:Sarah Hooker (14)

Sarah Hooker
b.Est 1630
m. 3 Apr 1622
  1. Joanna HookerEst 1622 - 1646
  2. Mary Hooker1624 - 1675/76
  3. Anne Hooker1625/26 - 1626
  4. Sarah Hooker1628 - 1629
  5. Sarah HookerEst 1630 - Aft 1691
  6. Rev. John HookerEst 1631 -
  7. Rev. Samuel HookerEst 1633 - 1697
  8. son HookerEst 1634 - 1634
m. Bef 1649
  1. John WilsonCal 1649 -
  2. Sarah WilsonEst 1650 -
  3. Thomas Wilson1652 - 1652
  4. Elizabeth Wilson1653 - 1653
  5. Elizabeth Wilson1656 - 1687
  6. Dr. John Wilson1660 - 1728
  7. Thomas Wilson1662 - 1662
  8. Susanna Wilson1664 - 1748
Facts and Events
Name[1] Sarah Hooker
Gender Female
Birth[1] Est 1630
Marriage Bef 1649 Estimate based on date of birth of eldest known child.
to Rev. John Wilson
Living[2] 20 Aug 1691 Medfield, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States (probably)Mentioned in husband's will of that date.
Death[2] Aft 20 Aug 1691 Medfield, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States (probably)
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Thomas Hooker sketch, in Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995).

    v SARAH, b. say 1630

  2. 2.0 2.1 Rev. John2 Wilson, in Sprague, Waldo Chamberlain; Frank E. Dyer; and Robert J. Dunkle. Genealogies of the Families of Braintree, Massachusetts, 1640-1850 (CD ROM): including the Modern Towns of Randoloph & Holbrook and the City of Quincy, after the Separation from Braintree in 1792-3. (Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999)
    5704.

    (pg 1904) He married about 1648 Sarah Hooker, daughter of Rev. Thomas & Susanna Hooker of Cambridge and Hartford, Conn.

  3.   Hooker, Edward, and Margaret Huntington Hooker. The Descendants of Rev. Thomas Hooker, Hartford, Connecticut, 1586-1908: Being an Account of What is Known of Rev. Thomas Hooker's Family in England, and More Particularly Concerning Himself and His Influence upon the Early History of Our Country; also All Items of Interest Which it has Been Possible to Gather Concerning the Early Generations of Hookers and Their Descendants in America. (Rochester, New York: Margaret Huntington Hooker, 1909)
    pp 9-10.