A History of the County of Westchester, Vol. II
May 10, 1658, mar. Mary Hawley. John Coe, supposed brother of Robert, removed to Newtown, L. I., thence to Westchester, and settled at Rye. He was one of the principal proprietors of Poningoe Neck,
APPENDIX. 511
1662. His sons were John and Jonathan. John left a son Andrew, who was living at Rye, in 1744. Jonathan left John, the father of Jonathan, M. D., of Portchester. The latter d. Nov. 28, 1809, mar. Esther Green, she d. Dec.
1, 1805. Their children were 1. John of Saratoga, mar. Furman, 2.
Reuben, d. 21st March, 1822, a;t. 67, mar. Phoebe Jordan, she d. Aug. 27th, 1842, a3t. 80, and 6 mo. He left Charles, who. d. Oct. 10, 1800, John, who d. Feb. 15, 1824, and Lavinia, who mar. Wiilett Moseman, 3. Edward d. at Marlborough, 4. Mary, mar. John Mead, of Greenwich, Connecticut.
Cooper of Throckmorton'.s neck. The ancestors of the Coopers emigrated from England to Massachusetts, at a very early period. The name of John occurs as freeman of Cambridge, in 1636. This individual was one ot the grantees named in the Indian deed of Southhampton, L. I. A. D. 1640. Mr. Cooper of Suffolk Co., L. I., a descendant of the above, had two sons and a da., the latter mar. and emigrated with her husband, to the western part of Pennsylvania. His sons he brought up as physicians. The youngest, Jeremiah, settled at Fishkill, in Dutchess Co. The eldest, Ananias, settled at Rhinebeck, in the same county, and was an active whig during the Revolutionary war. He had ten sons and three da. One son and one da. d. young.