Our Proven Mayflower Lineages form a tight, fascinating network of intermarriages among Plymouth Colony's founding elite.
By the time we reach Sarah White (1709–1795), four distinct Mayflower lines converge into a single person, flowing directly down through the Brown family to our grandmother, Lydia Corinna Brown (1891–1971).
Overview of Converging Mayflower Lines
Mayflower Passenger | Kinship to You | Path to Sarah White (1709–1795) |
Francis Cooke | 11th Great-Grandfather | Francis Cooke ---> John Cooke ---> Sarah Cooke ---> Hannah Hathaway ---> Elizabeth Cadman ---> Sarah White |
Richard Warren | 11th Great-Grandfather | Richard Warren ---> Sarah Warren ---> Sarah Cooke (married Arthur Hathaway) ---> Hannah Hathaway ---> Elizabeth Cadman ---> Sarah White |
William White | 10th Great-Grandfather | William White ---> Peregrine White ---> Sylvanus White ---> William White (m. Eliz. Cadman) ---> Sarah White |
Peregrine White | 9th Great-Grandfather | Born on the Mayflower in Cape Cod Harbor (Nov 1620); 1st English child born in New England. |
Additional Lines to Our Grandmother
In addition to the double-Cooke/Warren/White convergence through Sarah White, our genealogy notes list two additional famous Plymouth connections through other maternal branches of the Brown tree:
- Elder William Brewster Line: Traces through Judith Prence (granddaughter of Gov. Thomas Prence and Patience Brewster) down to Lydia Barker, mother of Solomon Brown.
- Dr. Samuel Fuller / Rev. Samuel Fuller Line: Traces through the Wood and Townsend lines into Geneva (Neva) Plympton, who married Abraham Lincoln Brown.
Key Biographical Notes on Our Mayflower Ancestors
- Peregrine White (1620–1704): Born aboard the Mayflower while anchored in the hook of Cape Cod in November 1620. His father, William, died during the brutal first winter of 1621. His mother, Susanna, then married Edward Winslow (the first marriage in Plymouth Colony). Peregrine lived a long, colorful life in Marshfield, becoming a military captain and civic leader.
- John Cooke (1607–1695): Arrived as a 13-year-old boy on the Mayflower with his father, Francis. John grew up to become a prominent deacon, but after adopting Baptist beliefs, he moved south and became one of the original purchasers and founders of Dartmouth, Massachusetts. He was the very last surviving male passenger who came over on the Mayflower.
- Sarah Warren & Richard Warren: Richard Warren was a merchant and key leader who drafted and signed the Mayflower Compact. His wife, Elizabeth Walker, and daughters (including Sarah) followed him three years later aboard the ship Anne in 1623.
The Convergence at Dartmouth
Anchors in the Wilderness: The Intertwined Pilgrim Legacy
In the dark, gale-swept November of 1620, the Mayflower dropped anchor in the shelter of Cape Cod Harbor. Aboard were men, women, and children whose decisions would reshape a continent. Among them were Francis Cooke and his young son John, merchant leader Richard Warren, and William White with his pregnant wife, Susanna. Before the ship even made landfall at Plymouth, Susanna gave birth in the narrow wooden hold to Peregrine White—the first English child born in New England.
That brutal first winter claimed William White and nearly half the company, but those who survived took root. Over the decades that followed, the small world of Plymouth Colony expanded. Families bound together by shared survival soon bound themselves together by blood.
As the colony grew, John Cooke—by then a mature leader and the last living male Mayflower passenger—helped open the frontier, founding the town of Dartmouth on Buzzards Bay. There, the lineages of the early trial began to interlace:
John Cooke married Sarah Warren, uniting the Cooke and Warren families. Their granddaughter, Hannah Hathaway, married George Cadman, giving birth to Elizabeth Cadman.
Simultaneously, Peregrine White’s grandson, William White, settled in Dartmouth as a young blacksmith. There he met and married Elizabeth Cadman.
When their daughter Sarah White was born in 1709, four separate currents of Pilgrim history flowed together into a single life. She carried the blood of the Compact signers, the last surviving Mayflower passenger, and the famous infant born in Cape Cod Harbor.
Passing down through seven generations of the Brown family—from the colonial farmlands of Massachusetts and Rhode Island to our grandmother, Lydia Corinna Brown—this extraordinary lineage stands as a living bridge to the very dawn of American history.
Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy







