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Hope <I>Fletcher</I> Stone

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Hope Fletcher Stone

Birth
Hertford, East Hertfordshire District, Hertfordshire, England
Death
22 Oct 1640 (aged 37–38)
Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA
Burial
Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.7651117, Longitude: -72.6746119
Memorial ID
View Source
Hope was the 1st wife of Reverend Samuel Stone, both Puritans from the Hertfordshire area of England. Upon refusal to conform to the near Catholic ways of the country at the time, they and several friends made the decision to depart England in 1633 on a ship called "Griffin". Later in the year (probably fall) they arrived in Boston, in the Massachusetts Bay Colony where they resided in "New Towne" (now known as Cambridge) until about 1636.

Sometime in 1636, along with their friend Thomas Hooker, they moved their congregation to a town called "Saukiog" as described by the Algonquin Indians in Connecticut, but renamed it "Hartford" after their home town in England shortly after arriving. After the town was built up, in about 1637-1639 Samuel and Hope raised a home on a lot located on the north bank of the "Little River", between the lots of Thomas Hooker's family and Puritan Elder William Goodwin. These were the founders of Hartford and many memorials exist here in their honor.

Hope and Samuel gave birth to four known children, possibly five, 1 son and 3 daughters, before she died in October of 1640. Sarah, John, Rebekah and Mary.

In Samuel's letters written to the Rev'd Thomas Shepard, he said that; "she smoaked out her days in the darkness of melancholy". Perhaps her death was from what we now call "Post-Partum Depression".

In the following year he married again to Elizabeth Allen.Rev. Samuel Stone married 1st by about 1634 _____ _____. She died shortly before 2 November 1640. There is no record of her name, her parentage or their marriage date or place.
They had four children: John, Rebecca Nash, Mary Fitch, & Sarah Butler.
Source: Anderson's Great Migration Begins (1995)

There is information online that her name was Hope Fletcher, that she and Samuel married in 1625 in England, that her father's name was William Fletcher and that her mother's name was Anne (Finney) Fletcher, but not authority is cited for these claims.
Hope was the 1st wife of Reverend Samuel Stone, both Puritans from the Hertfordshire area of England. Upon refusal to conform to the near Catholic ways of the country at the time, they and several friends made the decision to depart England in 1633 on a ship called "Griffin". Later in the year (probably fall) they arrived in Boston, in the Massachusetts Bay Colony where they resided in "New Towne" (now known as Cambridge) until about 1636.

Sometime in 1636, along with their friend Thomas Hooker, they moved their congregation to a town called "Saukiog" as described by the Algonquin Indians in Connecticut, but renamed it "Hartford" after their home town in England shortly after arriving. After the town was built up, in about 1637-1639 Samuel and Hope raised a home on a lot located on the north bank of the "Little River", between the lots of Thomas Hooker's family and Puritan Elder William Goodwin. These were the founders of Hartford and many memorials exist here in their honor.

Hope and Samuel gave birth to four known children, possibly five, 1 son and 3 daughters, before she died in October of 1640. Sarah, John, Rebekah and Mary.

In Samuel's letters written to the Rev'd Thomas Shepard, he said that; "she smoaked out her days in the darkness of melancholy". Perhaps her death was from what we now call "Post-Partum Depression".

In the following year he married again to Elizabeth Allen.Rev. Samuel Stone married 1st by about 1634 _____ _____. She died shortly before 2 November 1640. There is no record of her name, her parentage or their marriage date or place.
They had four children: John, Rebecca Nash, Mary Fitch, & Sarah Butler.
Source: Anderson's Great Migration Begins (1995)

There is information online that her name was Hope Fletcher, that she and Samuel married in 1625 in England, that her father's name was William Fletcher and that her mother's name was Anne (Finney) Fletcher, but not authority is cited for these claims.

Inscription

No Marker Found.

Gravesite Details

She is believed to be buried near her husband Samuel. This was the only "Cemetery" or "Burial Ground" in Hartford in 1640, when it was established to bury their "first dead" of the new congregation.



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