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John Corbally immigrated to America in 1747 as the Baptist religion opposed the King's Anglicanism. He became a lay minister, but persecution drove him to the Pennsylvania frontier. Ordained, he ministered until his death founding many Baptist churches and was known as "The ablest Baptist minister of his time in the Pennsylvania frontier." This is not a retelling of previously printed material; it represents over forty years of meticulous research. Previously unknown information describes the bogus painting of him, his birthplace, his true first wife, exact locations where he lived in Virginia and Pennsylvania, his long-lost treatise on The Believer's Defense of Baptism, his involvement in the Ketoctin and Redstone Baptist Associations, his involvement in the Whiskey Insurrection from the government's point of view, the Corbly Massacre as described in his and his daughter's letters, and many other previously unknown facts.This book is purchased at the lowest cost through Lulu.com.
William Shipp (ca. 1606-ca. 1657) emigrated from England to Lower Norfolk County, Virginia during or before 1637 and married twice. Descendants and relatives lived in Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, Tennessee, Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Texas and elsewhere.
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Francis Cooke was born August 1583, probably in England, and died 7 April 1663 in Plymouth (later to become Massachusetts). He married Hester Mahieu in 1603.
Francis Cooke (1577-1663) was born in the parish of Blyth, York Co., England. He immigrated to Amsterdam, Holland in 1608, and later lived in Leyden. He married Hester, a French walloon, 1609. Francis immigrated to Plymouth, Mass. with his oldest son, John on the Mayflower. The rest of the family came over on the ship Ann on July 1623. Francis Cooke died in Plymouth, Massachusetts on April 7, 1663. Descendants live in Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and elsewhere.