Hij is getrouwd met Eleanor Nellie Pemberton, Goodall, Cooke.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 6 april 1773 te Shenandoah, Page County, VA, United States, hij was toen 20 jaar oud.
Kind(eren):
John "Jack" Cooke, Sr. II<br>Birth name: John Cooke II<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: June 14 1752 - Westminster, Middlesex, England<br>Christening: June 28 1752 - Saint John Smith Square,Westminster,London,England<br>Marriage: Spouse: Eleanor Nellie Pemberton, Goodall, Cooke - Apr 6 1773 - Shenandoah, Page County, VA, United States<br>Marriage: Spouse: Ann Keatley - June 29 1813 - Monroe, Amherst, Virginia, United States<br>Residence: Suffolk, England<br>Death: Nov 20 1832 - Wyoming, West Virginia, United States<br>Burial: Nov 30 1832 - Delilah Methodist Church Cemetery, Wyoming, West Virginia, United States<br>Occupation: Frontiersman<br>Parents: John Cooke Sr, Elizabeth Cooke (born Gurney)<br>Spouses: Eleanor Nellie Pemberton, Goodall, Cooke, Ann Keatley<br>Children: Natalie Cook, Thomas Cooke Sr, John "Old Jack" Cooke, Jr III, Natalie Cooke, William Doby Cook, James W Cook Sr, William Newsom Cook<br>This person appears to have duplicated relatives. View it on FamilySearch to see the full information.<br> Additional information:
LifeSketch: Joel Hager's Southern West Virginia Researchh records "Westminster section London England";, on Weaver Street, in Oceana. There is a road side marker for John Cook beside the sidewalk on Main Street. His grave is located about 50 yards directly behind it. There are no dates on John Cooks's headstone.near London. Part of the entertainment was to be a trip down the river to Liverpool and return late that afternoon. Among these young people, who were from 10 to 16 years old, was Nellie, who lived in Scotland, but was visiting in London. This day was the 4th Sunday in May, 1766. None of the children ever returned home. Those who survived the trip were sold as indentured servants to planters, who by a not-so-strange coincidence met the ship prepared to pay for their passage. John and Nellie were bought by the same planter. John completed his term and worked for a while to pay for Nellie's term,. They then married and settled in the Shenandoah Valley.Buford's Bedford County Rifleman, marching with General Andrew Lewis on October 10, 1774 Pt. Pleasant, Va (now WVa).vate. He served under Captain Jonathan Langdon, Abraham Hite and George Wait in Colonel James Wood's regiment, the 8th Virginia Continentals. John was the battle of Monmouth, New Jersey, and later with Gen "Mad" Anthony Wayne in the storming of Stony Point on the Hudson River.on, Thomas, were with Capt. Hugh Caperton's Company f Virginia Rangers at Fort Lee, at the mouth of the Elk River (present day Charleston, WV) guarding the frontier settlements against the Indians. ges along streams. The white man followed these Indian trails as they came to Clear Fork Valley. They found plain indications that villages had been located on the choice bottom land along the Clear Fork River. this region, it was he who led Edward McDonald to the region in 1780 in trade for a bed blanket and a rifle. McDonald made a second trip to present day Wyoming County in 1784 to make the first survey for later settlement. Because of Indian unrest in this are, McDonald did not attempt to develop his lands until seven year after the county was opened to immigration by Wayne's Treaty with the Indians in 1795.nd their four sons: Thomas, John Jr., William and James to establish their home on the land granted to John for his Revolutionary War services. John and his four sons built a log cabin near the Laurel and Clear Forks which stood until around 1922.ght his family here and build his cabin a few miles form the Cooke homestead on Clear Fork in 1800. Cooke and Stewart both migrated from Virginia after serving in the Revolutionary War . Theses two became fast friends, Their children have intermarried until it's almost impossible to be related to one family without being related to the other.is cabin in what is now Wyoming County, WVa. This land grant was signed by James Monroe, Governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia in 1806.inia, was to Ann Hendrix. The marriage was proved by Polly Abbott and Francis Hendricks, residents of Monroe County.ension was granted on September 17, 1832 and also bounty land warrant for 160 acres. His pension was at an annual rate of $137.08, or $11.42 per month. He died on November 21, 1832 and didn't get to enjoy his pension for long. Ann Hendrix Cooke continued to collect a pension as his widow until her death on August 29, 1853.ension File Abstract is recorded on the website.
The FamilySearch Family Tree is published by MyHeritage under license from FamilySearch International, the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon Church).