Individual Details
Rev Thomas Hooker
(1586 - 1647)
1 Rev. Thomas Hooker, son of Thomas Hooker, born in England, about 1586, he entered
Emanuel College, Cambridgein 1604. He received the degree of B. A. in 1608, the degree of M. A. in 1611, and entering upon a divinity course, he was elect- ed a Fellow of the College. He left the College before completing the first course and receiving the degree of B. D. Thereare many reasons for supposing that he went from the college direct to Chelmsford and remained there until being silenced, arrested and placed under bonds to appear before the Ecclesiastical Court; he fled to Holland. Came to New England onship "Griffin" 1633. The name of his first wife is unknown and nothing of the parentage of his second wife, whose name was Susanna . His second wife survived him, and though nothing is positively known about her, there are many reasons for believing that in later years she became the wife of Elder William Goodwin and died at Farmington, Conn. He died at Hartford, Conn., July 7, 1647, age 61 From the Descendants of Rev Thomas Hooker.
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Biography Reverend Thomas Hooker
ev. THOMAS HOOKER was born at Marefield, Leicestershire, England, the son of THOMAS HOOKER and SUSANNAH PYM of Devonshire, on July 7, 1586. He entered Emanuel College, Cambridge, in 1603/04, receiving a B.A. degree in 1607/08, and an
M.A. in 1611. He then began the study of divinity, and was elected Fellow of the College, but left school before completing his first course. He started preaching in the Cambridge and London area. He married Susannah Harkes Garbrand, his second wife, on Apr. 3, 1621, in Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England. The name of his first wife, by which he had two children, is not known.
In 1626 he became a lecturer and assistant to the Rev. Mr. Mitchell at Chelmsford, and had the opportunity to speak to noblemen and others of high standing in English society. Rev. HOOKER became a victim of religious persecution. In 1630 he was tried in
Spiritual Court at Chelmsford, and silenced for non-conformity. He continued to work nearby, teaching at a school at Little Baddow. After a petition to have him reinstated in the English Church was turned down, he decided to move to Holland. He remained there for three years, first in Amsterdam, then Delft, and finally in Rotterdam.
He then returned to England for a visit, but found that his enemies were still active. He was forced to go into hiding, and in July 1633 he escaped by concealing himself on the ship Griffin, sailing from the Downs. He arrived at Boston, Suffolk, MA, on Sep. 4, 1633, and on Oct. 11 was chosen pastor of the church at Newton, where he remained for the next two years.
But, ironically, the desire for full political and religious liberty ... the impelling motive the drove the first settlers to the shores of New England, was also the chief cause of the formation of many of the interior settlements. When dissensions arose, as was inevitable among the independent pioneers, groups would depart and settle new communities. It was exactly this climate that developed in Boston, as THOMAS and the autocratic Rev. John Cotton found they could not coexist in Newton. Both leaders refrained from an open quarrel, and in 1635 permission was obtained from Governor William Bradford, to establish some settlements along the Connecticut River.
On Oct. 15, 1635, a party of sixty men, women, and children, set out by land for Connecticut. They sent their household goods by ship. The journey was a terrible hardship and the winter one of great suffering. The people from Dorchester settled at Windsor, those from Watertown at Wethersfield, and those from Cambridge at Hartford.
In June, 1636, Rev.THOMAS HOOKER, along with an additional 100 of his followers joined the original group in forming the settlement at Hartford, Hartford, CT, and became identified with all the major developments of the colony. Rev. Roger Newton became a student of his at Hartford, and married his daughter, Mary, in 1644. Rev. HOOKER published many books and sermons between 1637 and his death.
In 1638, Rev. THOMAS HOOKER preached the sermon that led to the adoption of the "Fundamental Orders", the first written constitution in the world that created a government. Today the Old State House, site of that sermon, is a museum in downtown Hartford.
He became ill with a violent epidemic disease and died at Hartford, on July 7, 1647, his 61st birthday. He is buried in the cemetery at Center Church in downtown Hartford. A statue commemorating his life stands at the old State House, about two blocks from where he is buried.
THOMAS left a rather sizeable estate of £1136 15s 00d. Compared with other estates of the time, this would make him one of the wealthy men of the Connecticut Colony. However, it is not known where this wealth came from. After leaving college he had mainly minor clerical positions, probably earning no more than £25 per year. It's doubtful he accumulated much while a refugee in Holland. He owned his house in Newton, and sold it to Rev. Thomas Shepard, his future son-in-law. Again, it is doubtful this asset could have made him wealthy. And, the eleven years that he lived in Hartford would have been more of a struggle for existence than a time to accumulate wealth. It seems extremely improbable that he could have himself accumulated this wealth. It may have come by inheritance from his father, but there is no record to substantiate that as fact.
Later in 1647, the house in which THOMAS lived was demolished. During the demolition, workers found a private receptacle which had been overlooked when the house was emptied in preparation for the demolition. They found papers which had been carefully bundled, probably by THOMAS himself. Without asking anyone, the workers threw the papers in with the rubbish and carted them away to destruction.
After the death of THOMAS, it is believed that SUSANNAH became the wife of Elder William Goodwin and died in Farmington, Hartford, CT.
Events
Families
| Spouse | Susannah Harkes Garbrand (1593 - 1676) |
| Child | Joanna Hooker (1622 - 1646) |
| Child | Mary Hooker (1624 - 1675) |
| Child | Anne Hooker (1625 - 1626) |
| Child | Sarah Hooker (1628 - 1629) |
| Child | Sarah Hooker (1629 - 1725) |
| Child | John Hooker (1631 - 1684) |
| Child | Rev Samuel Hooker (1633 - 1697) |
| Father | Thomas Hooker (1553 - ) |
| Mother | Susanna Pym (1564 - 1631) |
Notes
Education
Ancestry database. Cambridge University Alumni 1261-1900Degree
Ancestry database. Cambridge University Alumni 1261-1900Marriage
she was his second wife. No information about the first wife. The church records from This small village in rural England were destroyed (fire?) as were Hooker's private papers during the demolition of his house following his death in 1647Immigration
Rev. HOOKER became a victim of religious persecution. In 1630 he was tried inSpiritual Court at Chelmsford, and silenced for non-conformity. He continued to work nearby, teaching at a school at Little Baddow. After a petition to have him reinstated in the English Church was turned down, he decided to move to Holland. He remained there for three years, first in Amsterdam, then Delft, and finally in Rotterdam
Immigration
Thomas Hooker in the U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s Name Thomas Hooker Arrival Year 1633 Arrival Place New England Primary Immigrant Hooker, Thomas Source Publication Code 9151 Annotation Contains 35 articles excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1847-1961. About 17,000 names. Similar lists in Boyer, nos. 0702, 0714, 0717, 0720. Source Bibliography TEPPER, MICHAEL, editor. Passengers to America: A Consolidation of Ship Passenger Lists from "The New England Historical and Genealogical Register." Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1977. 554p. Reprinted with new introduction and indexes, 1978. Repr. 1980. Household Members (Name) Thomas HookerMiscellaneous
A Freeman was a person - male of female - who sought and was accepted as a member of a Puritan church. All were expected to go to church, but it was necessary to apply for membershipsource: Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, U.S., Applications of Freemen, 1630-1691 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000.
Immigration
When Rev. Thomas Hooker left Mass for CT there were already TWO advanced parties here. William Goodwin came in 1635. The second was led or met with Samuel Stone.They followed a path known as the Old Bay Path (or the old Connecticut Path). Thomas arrived in Hartford June 1636.
Source: "Tercentenary Commission of the State of Connecticut, Committee on Historical Publications."
series: Tercentenary pamphlet series; 4
Endnotes
1. , (N.p.: n.p., n.d.).
2. , https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/48127/images/PlantersCommonwealth-006722-105?ssrc=&backlabel=Return&pId=211841.
3. "," database, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/2496/ : accessed ); extracted from Robert Charles Anderson, New England, The Great Migration and The Great Migration Begins, 1620-1635 (N.p.: New England Historical and Genealogical Society, 1996–2011), 982-985.
4. , "," database, ( : accessed ), .
5. BillionGraves, "BillionGraves Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KSL1-PRW : 14 June 2017), Thomas Hooker, died 07 Jul 1647; citing BillionGraves (http://www.billiongraves.com : 2012), Burial at Ancient Cemetery, Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States..

