Person:Alice Cook (18)

Watchers
m. 4 Dec 1665
  1. Alice CookBef 1674 - 1714
m. Bef 1694
m. 19 May 1701
  1. Deacon Benjamin Stevens1713/14 - 1767
Facts and Events
Name[1] Alice Cook
Married Name Alice Whiting
Married Name Alice Stevens
Gender Female
Birth[1] Bef 1674 Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United StatesBased on estimated date of marriage.
Marriage Bef 1694 to Rev. John Whiting
Marriage 19 May 1701 Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United StatesAlso recorded at Glastonbury.
to Rev. Timothy Stevens
Death[2] 10 Mar 1714 Glastonbury, Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Burial[2] Green Cemetery, Glastonbury, Hartford, Connecticut, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 3. Joseph Cook, in Paige, Lucius Robinson. History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877: With a Genealogical Register. (Boston, Massachusetts: H. O. Houghton, 1877)
    514.

    "… Alice (Cook), b (elder than Haynes), m. Rev. John Whiting of Lancaster about 1693; he was killed by the Indians 11 Sept. 1697, and she m. Rev. Timothy Stevens of Glastonbury, Conn., 19 May 1701; her dau. Alice d. here 19 Oct. 1697, a. 2 years 10 mo., and Eunice, d. 4 Nov. 1697, a. 1 year."

  2. 2.0 2.1 Alice Cook Stevens, in Find A Grave.
  3.   According to Find A Grave, Alice (Cook) (Whiting) Stevens died in 1714. A photo of her table monument is included. However, her burial is not recorded in the Hale Collection, the death is not recorded in any published Connecticut Vital Records or available Church Record abstract, and Rev. Stevens' 1726 will mentions, but does not name, a wife. The most reasonable explanation is that he remarried after her 1714 death, but no record appears to support that theory.