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Family Record: Thomas BROOKE x Susan FOSTER

Family Record: Thomas BROOKE x Susan FOSTER - Overview

Husband Thomas BROOKE b. 1561 d. 1612
Wife Susan FOSTER b. About 1570 d. 1612
Child Robert BROOKE b. 06/23/1602 d. 1655

Thomas BROOKE, only child of Richard BROOKE and Elizabeth TWYNE, was born in 1561. Thomas died in 1612 aged about 51.

Susan FOSTER, only child of Thomas FORSTER V and Susan UNKNOWN, was born about 1570. She died in 1612 aged about 42.

He had a family with Susan. One son given.

Children

i    

Robert BROOKEa was born on 06/23/1602 in Southampton, Hampshire, England. He died in 1655 aged about 53.

 

 

Notes

a. Owing to family prestige and personal worth, Robert commanded much influence, and a commission was issued him at London, September 20, 1649, as a Commander of a County in Maryland, to be newly erected. He had an agreement with Cecilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore (1605-75), to receive a manor of 2,000 acres (8.1 km2) for every ten persons he transported. Robert and Cecilius were friends while both attended Oxford. Robert immigrated from Cheshire, England to Maryland on June 30, 1650 aboard his own ships and at his own expense, along with his second wife, ten children, 21 men servants, seven maid servants and a pack of hounds. On July 22, 1650, along with his two sons, Baker and Thomas, Sr., he took the oath of Fidelity to the Proprietor. His sons each received separate grants of land in various counties of Maryland. Robert was constituted as Commander of newly formed Charles County in Maryland on October 30, 1650. When the Puritans ascended in 1652, under the Cromwellian Government, Robert was made head of Provisional Council of Maryland. He served in this capacity from March 29 to July 3, 1652. He was one of the five commissioners making up this Council, which was the government of Maryland. During this period, he served as the Council’s President, which was analogous to being Lieutenant-General or Governor of the Province. Robert’s cooperation with the Bennett-Claiborne Puritan faction from 1652-54 brought him the displeasure of Lord Baltimore and the loss of his proprietary offices. Later he allied himself with the conservative Catholic Party. It is thought that he died a Roman Catholic, although no documentation has been found to prove this assertion. His second wife, Mary Mainwaring, was definitely a member of the Roman faith, and most of his sons professed Roman Catholicism.; [Note Record]


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