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| File:2011-12-04 Morgan Hill, Henry W. Coe State Wilderness Park 003 (6492982235).jpg
| File:2011-12-04 Morgan Hill, Henry W. Coe State Wilderness Park 003 (6492982235).jpg
| Henry W. Coe State Wilderness Park, in the [[Diablo Range]], named for [[Henry Willard Coe, Jr.]]
| Henry W. Coe State Wilderness Park, in the [[Diablo Range]], named for [[Henry Willard Coe Jr.]]
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|File:Mt Coe.jpg
|File:Mt Coe.jpg
Coe has many notable descendants and towns and important landmarks bearing the names of his descendants. [[Coe Township, Michigan]] is named after [[George Coe (Michigan politician)|George Coe]], [[Lieutenant Governor of Michigan]]<ref name=”Romig”>{{cite book |last=Romig |first=Walter |title=Michigan Place Names |publisher=Wayne State University Press |year=1986 |isbn=0-8143-1838-X |location=Detroit, Michigan |orig-year=1973}}</ref> and [[Coe Township, Rock Island County, Illinois]] is named for [[Albert S. Coe]] who served in the [[Illinois General Assembly]] and developed the area’s [[Agriculture|agricultural]] industry.<ref name=”auto” /><ref>{{Cite web |title=Township Histories of Rock Island County Illinois |url=http://genealogytrails.com/ill/rockisland/townshiphistory.html |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=genealogytrails.com}}</ref> [[Coe, Indiana]] is named for one of the founders of [[Indianapolis]] and a frontier physician, [[Isaac Coe]].<ref name=”auto” /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Thompson |first=Charles Nebeker |title=Year Book of the Society of Indiana Pioneers |publisher=Society of Indiana Pioneers |year=1925}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Cierzniak |first=Libby |date=2015-01-24 |title=Indianapolis Collected: Paging Dr. Coe {{!}} Historic Indianapolis {{!}} All Things Indianapolis History |url=https://historicindianapolis.com/indianapolis-collected-paging-dr-coe/ |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=Historic Indianapolis |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Rice |first=Thurman Brooks |title=One Hundred Years of Medicine |publisher=Indiana State Board of Health |year=1949}}</ref>
Coe has many notable descendants and towns and important landmarks bearing the names of his descendants. [[Coe Township, Michigan]] is named after [[George Coe (Michigan politician)|George Coe]], [[Lieutenant Governor of Michigan]]<ref name=”Romig”>{{cite book |last=Romig |first=Walter |title=Michigan Place Names |publisher=Wayne State University Press |year=1986 |isbn=0-8143-1838-X |location=Detroit, Michigan |orig-year=1973}}</ref> and [[Coe Township, Rock Island County, Illinois]] is named for [[Albert S. Coe]] who served in the [[Illinois General Assembly]] and developed the area’s [[Agriculture|agricultural]] industry.<ref name=”auto” /><ref>{{Cite web |title=Township Histories of Rock Island County Illinois |url=http://genealogytrails.com/ill/rockisland/townshiphistory.html |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=genealogytrails.com}}</ref> [[Coe, Indiana]] is named for one of the founders of [[Indianapolis]] and a frontier physician, [[Isaac Coe]].<ref name=”auto” /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Thompson |first=Charles Nebeker |title=Year Book of the Society of Indiana Pioneers |publisher=Society of Indiana Pioneers |year=1925}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Cierzniak |first=Libby |date=2015-01-24 |title=Indianapolis Collected: Paging Dr. Coe {{!}} Historic Indianapolis {{!}} All Things Indianapolis History |url=https://historicindianapolis.com/indianapolis-collected-paging-dr-coe/ |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=Historic Indianapolis |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Rice |first=Thurman Brooks |title=One Hundred Years of Medicine |publisher=Indiana State Board of Health |year=1949}}</ref>
The namesake of [[Henry W. Coe State Park]], the largest [[state park]] in [[Northern California]] and the second largest state park in the state and popular campground Coe Ranch,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Coe’s 10,000 Year History |url=https://www.coeparkfund.org/content/history.html |access-date=2024-07-05 |website=www.coeparkfund.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Stienstra |first=Tom |date=August 14, 2016 |title=Stars and more in the night sky connect us with past |url=https://www.sfgate.com/outdoors/article/Stars-and-more-in-the-night-sky-connect-us-with-9141017.php |work=SFGate}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Brooks |first=Eric |date=July 2, 2023 |title=Bay Area hike to Henry W. Coe State Park famous for solitude, tarantulas |url=https://www.sfgate.com/california-parks/article/bay-area-hike-henry-coe-state-park-18175652.php |work=SFGate}}</ref> Henry Willard Coe, Jr.<ref name=”auto” /> The visitor center near [[Homestead, Florida]] of [[Everglades National Park]] is named for descendant [[Ernest F. Coe]], who founded the park.<ref name=”:9″>U.S. Government, [http://ftp.resource.org/gpo.gov/laws/105/publ82.105.pdf Marjory Stoneman Douglas Wilderness and Ernest F. Coe Visitor Center Designation Act] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721004809/http://ftp.resource.org/gpo.gov/laws/105/publ82.105.pdf|date=2011-07-21}}, Public Law 105–82 November 13, 1997. Retrieved on January 30, 2010.</ref> [[Mount Coe]] and [[Coe Glacier]] are named for Henry Coe,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Glacial History of Mount Hood in Oregon |url=https://us.ukessays.com/essays/geography/glacial-history-mount-hood-oregon-9576.php |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=us.ukessays.com |language=en-us}}</ref> a [[Natural history|naturalist]] and journalist who ascended [[Mount Adams (Washington)|Mount Adams]] in the 19th century.<ref name=”:10″>{{Cite web |date=2021-09-29 |title=”Cemetery Tales” returns, to be held virtually |url=https://www.columbiagorgenews.com/gorge-life/cemetery-tales-returns-to-be-held-virtually/article_659b86ee-2085-11ec-aa16-c72d455d5fe1.html |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=Columbia Gorge News |language=en}}</ref> He [[plat]]ted the town of [[Hood River, Oregon]], which was settled by [[Nathaniel Coe]], a pioneer politician and his father.<ref name=”:11″>{{Cite episode |title=Tony Goldwyn’s Political Roots |series=Who Do You Think You Are? |series-link=Who Do You Think You Are? (American TV series) |network=TLC |date=April 14, 2015 |season=5 |number=10}}</ref><ref name=”auto” /> They cultivated the [[Hood River Valley]] with fruit trees.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Nathaniel Coe family papers – Archives West |url=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv00355 |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=archiveswest.orbiscascade.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Babitz |first=Arthur |date=2014-10-21 |title=Coe House |url=https://www.hoodriverhistorymuseum.org/coe-house/ |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=The History Museum of Hood River County |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=”:10″ />
The namesake of [[Henry W. Coe State Park]], the largest [[state park]] in [[Northern California]] and the second largest state park in the state and popular campground Coe Ranch,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Coe’s 10,000 Year History |url=https://www.coeparkfund.org/content/history.html |access-date=2024-07-05 |website=www.coeparkfund.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Stienstra |first=Tom |date=August 14, 2016 |title=Stars and more in the night sky connect us with past |url=https://www.sfgate.com/outdoors/article/Stars-and-more-in-the-night-sky-connect-us-with-9141017.php |work=SFGate}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Brooks |first=Eric |date=July 2, 2023 |title=Bay Area hike to Henry W. Coe State Park famous for solitude, tarantulas |url=https://www.sfgate.com/california-parks/article/bay-area-hike-henry-coe-state-park-18175652.php |work=SFGate}}</ref> Henry Willard Coe Jr.<ref name=”auto” /> The visitor center near [[Homestead, Florida]] of [[Everglades National Park]] is named for descendant [[Ernest F. Coe]], who founded the park.<ref name=”:9″>U.S. Government, [http://ftp.resource.org/gpo.gov/laws/105/publ82.105.pdf Marjory Stoneman Douglas Wilderness and Ernest F. Coe Visitor Center Designation Act] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721004809/http://ftp.resource.org/gpo.gov/laws/105/publ82.105.pdf|date=2011-07-21}}, Public Law 105–82 November 13, 1997. Retrieved on January 30, 2010.</ref> [[Mount Coe]] and [[Coe Glacier]] are named for Henry Coe,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Glacial History of Mount Hood in Oregon |url=https://us.ukessays.com/essays/geography/glacial-history-mount-hood-oregon-9576.php |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=us.ukessays.com |language=en-us}}</ref> a [[Natural history|naturalist]] and journalist who ascended [[Mount Adams (Washington)|Mount Adams]] in the 19th century.<ref name=”:10″>{{Cite web |date=2021-09-29 |title=”Cemetery Tales” returns, to be held virtually |url=https://www.columbiagorgenews.com/gorge-life/cemetery-tales-returns-to-be-held-virtually/article_659b86ee-2085-11ec-aa16-c72d455d5fe1.html |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=Columbia Gorge News |language=en}}</ref> He [[plat]]ted the town of [[Hood River, Oregon]], which was settled by [[Nathaniel Coe]], a pioneer politician and his father.<ref name=”:11″>{{Cite episode |title=Tony Goldwyn’s Political Roots |series=Who Do You Think You Are? |series-link=Who Do You Think You Are? (American TV series) |network=TLC |date=April 14, 2015 |season=5 |number=10}}</ref><ref name=”auto” /> They cultivated the [[Hood River Valley]] with fruit trees.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Nathaniel Coe family papers – Archives West |url=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv00355 |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=archiveswest.orbiscascade.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Babitz |first=Arthur |date=2014-10-21 |title=Coe House |url=https://www.hoodriverhistorymuseum.org/coe-house/ |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=The History Museum of Hood River County |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=”:10″ />
[[Coe College]],<ref>{{Cite web |title=Daniel Coe |url=https://public.coe.edu/historyweb/friends_coe_daniel.htm |access-date=July 5, 2024 |website=Coe College}}</ref> is named for Daniel Coe, another descendant,<ref name=”auto” /> and [[Coe Elementary School]] in [[Seattle]] is named after descendant [[Frantz Hunt Coe]], though the original building burned down in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wilma |first=David |date=January 23, 2001 |title=Seattle’s historic Coe Elementary School burns on January 21, 2001 |url=https://www.historylink.org/File/2954 |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=www.historylink.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Schools |first=Seattle Public |title=About |url=https://coees.seattleschools.org/about/ |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=Frantz Coe Elementary School |language=en-US}}</ref> Coe Circle, a park in [[Portland, Oregon]], is named after descendant [[Henry Waldo Coe]],<ref>{{Cite news |last=Button |first=Hannah |date=September 21, 2015 |title=Where We Live: Portland’s Joan of Arc statue |url=https://www.koin.com/news/where-we-live-portlands-joan-of-arc-statue/ |work=KOIN 6}}</ref><ref name=”auto” /> where he commissioned the installation of a [[Ormolu|gilt bronze]] statue of [[Joan of Arc]].<ref name=”Snyder”>{{cite book |last=Snyder |first=Eugene E. |title=Portland Potpourri |publisher=[[Binford & Mort]] |year=1991 |isbn=0-8323-0493-X |location=Portland, Oregon |pages=73–79}}</ref> Dudley Coe Hall at [[Bowdoin College]], formerly the infirmary, is named for the son of Thomas Upham Coe, an alumnus, who was a prominent doctor and lumber baron of [[Bangor, Maine]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Reilly |first=Wayne E. |date=March 12, 2017 |title=A look back at the millionaire ‘lumber kings’ of Bangor |url=https://www.bangordailynews.com/2017/03/12/living/a-look-back-at-the-millionaire-lumber-kings-of-bangor/ |work=Bangor Daily News}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Burke |first=Molly |date=2011-02-25 |title=Dudley Coe stands as a testament to College history |url=https://bowdoinorient.com/bonus/article/6122/ |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=The Bowdoin Orient |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Maine: A History |publisher=American Historical Society |year=1919 |editor-last=Hatch |editor-first=Louis Clinton |volume=4}}</ref> Portraits of Thomas Upham Coe are in the [[Smithsonian Libraries and Archives]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Portrait of Thomas Upham Coe (1837-1920), (painting). |url=https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?uri=full=3100001~!258523!0 |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=siris-artinventories.si.edu}}</ref> and the [[Harvard Art Museums]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harvard |title=Thomas Upham Coe {{!}} Harvard Art Museums |url=https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/261656 |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=harvardartmuseums.org |language=en}}</ref> Coe Hall at [[Wiley University]] was named for Herman Gurnee Coe, the commissioner of [[Cedar County, Iowa]],<ref name=”auto” /> and his daughter, Isabel, who taught there.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Coe |url=https://afrotexan.com/colleges/wiley/coe.htm |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=afrotexan.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=About Wiley University |url=https://www.wileyc.edu/about-wiley-university |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=Wiley University |language=en}}</ref>
[[Coe College]],<ref>{{Cite web |title=Daniel Coe |url=https://public.coe.edu/historyweb/friends_coe_daniel.htm |access-date=July 5, 2024 |website=Coe College}}</ref> is named for Daniel Coe, another descendant,<ref name=”auto” /> and [[Coe Elementary School]] in [[Seattle]] is named after descendant [[Frantz Hunt Coe]], though the original building burned down in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wilma |first=David |date=January 23, 2001 |title=Seattle’s historic Coe Elementary School burns on January 21, 2001 |url=https://www.historylink.org/File/2954 |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=www.historylink.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Schools |first=Seattle Public |title=About |url=https://coees.seattleschools.org/about/ |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=Frantz Coe Elementary School |language=en-US}}</ref> Coe Circle, a park in [[Portland, Oregon]], is named after descendant [[Henry Waldo Coe]],<ref>{{Cite news |last=Button |first=Hannah |date=September 21, 2015 |title=Where We Live: Portland’s Joan of Arc statue |url=https://www.koin.com/news/where-we-live-portlands-joan-of-arc-statue/ |work=KOIN 6}}</ref><ref name=”auto” /> where he commissioned the installation of a [[Ormolu|gilt bronze]] statue of [[Joan of Arc]].<ref name=”Snyder”>{{cite book |last=Snyder |first=Eugene E. |title=Portland Potpourri |publisher=[[Binford & Mort]] |year=1991 |isbn=0-8323-0493-X |location=Portland, Oregon |pages=73–79}}</ref> Dudley Coe Hall at [[Bowdoin College]], formerly the infirmary, is named for the son of Thomas Upham Coe, an alumnus, who was a prominent doctor and lumber baron of [[Bangor, Maine]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Reilly |first=Wayne E. |date=March 12, 2017 |title=A look back at the millionaire ‘lumber kings’ of Bangor |url=https://www.bangordailynews.com/2017/03/12/living/a-look-back-at-the-millionaire-lumber-kings-of-bangor/ |work=Bangor Daily News}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Burke |first=Molly |date=2011-02-25 |title=Dudley Coe stands as a testament to College history |url=https://bowdoinorient.com/bonus/article/6122/ |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=The Bowdoin Orient |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Maine: A History |publisher=American Historical Society |year=1919 |editor-last=Hatch |editor-first=Louis Clinton |volume=4}}</ref> Portraits of Thomas Upham Coe are in the [[Smithsonian Libraries and Archives]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Portrait of Thomas Upham Coe (1837-1920), (painting). |url=https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?uri=full=3100001~!258523!0 |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=siris-artinventories.si.edu}}</ref> and the [[Harvard Art Museums]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harvard |title=Thomas Upham Coe {{!}} Harvard Art Museums |url=https://harvardartmuseums.org/collections/object/261656 |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=harvardartmuseums.org |language=en}}</ref> Coe Hall at [[Wiley University]] was named for Herman Gurnee Coe, the commissioner of [[Cedar County, Iowa]],<ref name=”auto” /> and his daughter, Isabel, who taught there.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Coe |url=https://afrotexan.com/colleges/wiley/coe.htm |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=afrotexan.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=About Wiley University |url=https://www.wileyc.edu/about-wiley-university |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=Wiley University |language=en}}</ref>
{{Tree list}}
{{Tree list}}
* Henry Coe (1555 — 1630), m. Mary Vincent
* Henry Coe (1555 — 1630), m. Mary Vincent
** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert Coe, Sr. (1596 – 1690), m. Mary
** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert Coe Sr. (1596 – 1690), m. Mary
*** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[John Coe (colonist)|John Coe]], Sr. (1625 — 1693)
*** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[John Coe (colonist)|John Coe]] Sr. (1625 — 1693)
**** [[John Coe (judge)|John Coe]], Jr. (1657 — 1735)
**** [[John Coe (judge)|John Coe]] Jr. (1657 — 1735)
**** {{Tree list/final branch}} Samuel Coe, Sr. (1672 — 1742), m. Margaret Van Zandt
**** {{Tree list/final branch}} Samuel Coe Sr. (1672 — 1742), m. Margaret Van Zandt
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Samuel Coe, Jr. (1718 — 1759), m. Phebe Seaman
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Samuel Coe Jr. (1718 — 1759), m. Phebe Seaman
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} William Coe (1748 — 1829), m. Martha Connelly
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} William Coe (1748 — 1829), m. Martha Connelly
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} John Coe I (1784 — 1818), m. Polly Cooper
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} John Coe I (1784 — 1818), m. Polly Cooper
******* Matthew D. Coe (1797 — 1881), m. Ruth Deyo
******* Matthew D. Coe (1797 — 1881), m. Ruth Deyo
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Herman Gurnee Coe]] (1826 — 1917), m. Katherine McClung
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Herman Gurnee Coe]] (1826 — 1917), m. Katherine McClung
*** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert Coe, Jr. (1626 — 1659), m. Hannah Mitchell
*** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert Coe Jr. (1626 — 1659), m. Hannah Mitchell
**** {{Tree list/final branch}} John Coe, Sr. (1658 — 1741), m. Mary [[Joseph Hawley (captain)|Hawley]]
**** {{Tree list/final branch}} John Coe Sr. (1658 — 1741), m. Mary [[Joseph Hawley (captain)|Hawley]]
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert Coe (1684 — 1762), m. Barbara Parmalee
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert Coe (1684 — 1762), m. Barbara Parmalee
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Jonathan Coe (1710 — 1795), m. Elizabeth Elmer
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Jonathan Coe (1710 — 1795), m. Elizabeth Elmer
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} George Washington Coe (1843 — 1920), m. Lois Ann Ives
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} George Washington Coe (1843 — 1920), m. Lois Ann Ives
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} George Henry Coe (1882 — 1967), m. Blanch Mays
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} George Henry Coe (1882 — 1967), m. Blanch Mays
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Jack Coe]], Sr. (1918 — 1956), m. Juanita Scott
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Jack Coe]] Sr. (1918 — 1956), m. Juanita Scott
************* [[Jack Coe, Jr.]] (1944)
************* [[Jack Coe Jr.]] (1944)
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Mary Coe (1717 — 1789), (m. 2nd) James Crampton
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Mary Coe (1717 — 1789), (m. 2nd) James Crampton
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} Molly Crampton (1748 — 1797), m. James Kilbourn
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} Molly Crampton (1748 — 1797), m. James Kilbourn
********* [[Ernest F. Coe]] (1867 – 1951)
********* [[Ernest F. Coe]] (1867 – 1951)
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Levi Coe]] (1810 — 1832), m. Lavinia McNeil
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Levi Coe]] (1810 — 1832), m. Lavinia McNeil
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Joseph Coe, Sr. (1686 — 1754), m. Abigail Robinson
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Joseph Coe Sr. (1686 — 1754), m. Abigail Robinson
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Joseph Coe, Jr. (1713 — 1784), m. Abigail Curtiss
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Joseph Coe Jr. (1713 — 1784), m. Abigail Curtiss
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} James Coe, Sr. (1740 — 1794), m. Rachel Benton
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} James Coe Sr. (1740 — 1794), m. Rachel Benton
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[James Coe (politician)|James Coe]], Jr. (1769 — 1845), m. Nancy Pratt
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[James Coe (politician)|James Coe]] Jr. (1769 — 1845), m. Nancy Pratt
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Almon Coe (1796 — 1853), m. Climena Spelman
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Almon Coe (1796 — 1853), m. Climena Spelman
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Samuel Buel Coe]] (1835 — 1910), m. Mary Cronkhite
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Samuel Buel Coe]] (1835 — 1910), m. Mary Cronkhite
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Eben Coe (1785 — 1862), (m. 1st) Mehitable Smith, (m. 2nd) Mary Upham
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Eben Coe (1785 — 1862), (m. 1st) Mehitable Smith, (m. 2nd) Mary Upham
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Henry Willard Coe]] (1814 — 1896), m. Hannah Huntington Smith
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Henry Willard Coe]] (1814 — 1896), m. Hannah Huntington Smith
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Henry Willard Coe, Jr.]] (1860 — 1943), m. Rhoda Stutcliffe
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Henry Willard Coe Jr.]] (1860 — 1943), m. Rhoda Stutcliffe
*********** [[Sada Sutcliffe Coe]] (1910 — 1979), m. Charles Robinson
*********** [[Sada Sutcliffe Coe]] (1910 — 1979), m. Charles Robinson
********* [[Thomas Upham Coe]] (1837 — 1920), m. Sadie Loantha
********* [[Thomas Upham Coe]] (1837 — 1920), m. Sadie Loantha
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Henry C. Coe]] (1844 — 1928), m. Kittie Carlton
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Henry C. Coe]] (1844 — 1928), m. Kittie Carlton
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Lawrence Coe (1831 — 1897), m. Mary Graves
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Lawrence Coe (1831 — 1897), m. Mary Graves
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Helen Coe (1860 — 1946), m. John Howard, Sr.
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Helen Coe (1860 — 1946), m. John Howard Sr.
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Sidney Howard]] (1891 — 1939), m. [[Clare Eames]]
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Sidney Howard]] (1891 — 1939), m. [[Clare Eames]]
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Jennifer Howard (actress)|Jennifer Howard]] (1925 — 1993), m. [[Samuel Goldwyn, Jr.]]
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Jennifer Howard (actress)|Jennifer Howard]] (1925 — 1993), m. [[Samuel Goldwyn Jr.]]
************* [[Tony Goldwyn]] (1958), m. Jane Musky
************* [[Tony Goldwyn]] (1958), m. Jane Musky
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Curtis Coe (1797 — 1871), m. Hannah Clark
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Curtis Coe (1797 — 1871), m. Hannah Clark
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Joel Horton Coe (1827 — 1905), (m. 1st) Wealthy Clark
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Joel Horton Coe (1827 — 1905), (m. 1st) Wealthy Clark
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Arthur Edwin Coe (1854 — 1924), m. Minnie Lees
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Arthur Edwin Coe (1854 — 1924), m. Minnie Lees
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert E. Coe, Sr. (1880 — 1970), m. Mary Shoemaker
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Robert E. Coe Sr. (1880 — 1970), m. Mary Shoemaker
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} Curtis C. Coe (1911 — 1996), m. Pearl Haney
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} Curtis C. Coe (1911 — 1996), m. Pearl Haney
************* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Margaret Coe]] (1941), m. [[Mark Clarke (artist)|Mark Clarke]]
************* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Margaret Coe]] (1941), m. [[Mark Clarke (artist)|Mark Clarke]]
************** [[Tim Clarke (jazz musician)|Tim Clarke]]
************** [[Tim Clarke (jazz musician)|Tim Clarke]]
************** [[Karin Clarke]]
************** [[Karin Clarke]]
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Robert E. Coe]], Jr. (1915 — 2003), m. Ethel Sanders
************ {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Robert E. Coe Jr. (1915 — 2003), m. Ethel Sanders
********* [[Curtis N. Coe]] (1830 — 1908), m. Martha Hammond
********* [[Curtis N. Coe]] (1830 — 1908), m. Martha Hammond
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} David Coe (1715 — 1807), m. Hannah Camp
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} David Coe (1715 — 1807), m. Hannah Camp
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} Jesse Coe, Sr. (1743 — 1824), m. Abigail Miller
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} Jesse Coe Sr. (1743 — 1824), m. Abigail Miller
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Ezra Coe (1796 — 1869), m. Elizabeth Somberger
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Ezra Coe (1796 — 1869), m. Elizabeth Somberger
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} George Coe (1831 — 1906), m. Harriet Van Voorhis
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} George Coe (1831 — 1906), m. Harriet Van Voorhis
********** [[George Albert Coe]] (1862 – 1951), m. Sadie Knowland
********** [[George Albert Coe]] (1862 – 1951), m. Sadie Knowland
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Eli Coe]], Sr. (1758 — 1835), m. Rachel Miller
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Eli Coe]] Sr. (1758 — 1835), m. Rachel Miller
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Eli Coe, Jr. (1784 — 1847), m. Lois Coe
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} Eli Coe Jr. (1784 — 1847), m. Lois Coe
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Isaac Coe (1816 — 1899), m. Sarah Bacon
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} Isaac Coe (1816 — 1899), m. Sarah Bacon
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} T. Eloise Coe (1852 — 1899), m. [[Frank P. Ireland]]
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} T. Eloise Coe (1852 — 1899), m. [[Frank P. Ireland]]
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Hayden Coe]] (1811 — 1862), (m. 2nd) Josephine Lumpkin
********* {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Hayden Coe]] (1811 — 1862), (m. 2nd) Josephine Lumpkin
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Hayden Lumpkin Coe (1860 — 1904), m. Sara Hughes
********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Hayden Lumpkin Coe (1860 — 1904), m. Sara Hughes
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Frederick Hayden Hughs Coe, Sr. (1884 — 1914), m. Annette Harrell
*********** {{Tree list/final branch}} Frederick Hayden Hughs Coe Sr. (1884 — 1914), m. Annette Harrell
************ [[Fred Coe]], Jr. (1914 — 1979), m. Alice Griggs
************ [[Fred Coe]] Jr. (1914 — 1979), m. Alice Griggs
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} John Coe, Jr. (1693 — 1751), m. Hannah Parsons
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} John Coe Jr. (1693 — 1751), m. Hannah Parsons
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Simeon Coe, Sr. (1721 — 1782), m. Anna Morris
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Simeon Coe Sr. (1721 — 1782), m. Anna Morris
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} Simeon Coe, Jr. (1755 — 1838), m. Eunice Strong
******* {{Tree list/final branch}} Simeon Coe Jr. (1755 — 1838), m. Eunice Strong
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Simeon Maltby Coe]] (1784 – 1848), m. Mary Miles
******** {{Tree list/final branch}} [[Simeon Maltby Coe]] (1784 – 1848), m. Mary Miles
********* [[George Coe (Michigan politician)|George Coe]] (1811 — 1869), (m. 1st) Almira Mason, (m. 2nd) Rhoda Mason
********* [[George Coe (Michigan politician)|George Coe]] (1811 — 1869), (m. 1st) Almira Mason, (m. 2nd) Rhoda Mason
********** [[Clarence Clinton Coe]] (1864 — 1936), m. Claudia Smith
********** [[Clarence Clinton Coe]] (1864 — 1936), m. Claudia Smith
********* [[Decius O. Coe]] (1820 — 1870), m. Eveline Stevens
********* [[Decius O. Coe]] (1820 — 1870), m. Eveline Stevens
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Ephraim Coe, Sr. (1698 — 1765), m. Hannah Comfort
***** {{Tree list/final branch}} Ephraim Coe Sr. (1698 — 1765), m. Hannah Comfort
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Ephraim Coe, Jr. (1724 — 1778), m. Anne Canfield
****** {{Tree list/final branch}} Ephraim Coe Jr. (1724 — 1778), m. Anne Canfield
******* {{Tree list/final branch|Timothy Coe (1760 — 1841), m. Mary Hall ********=Benson Coe (1793 — 1862), m. Esther Ward
******* {{Tree list/final branch|Timothy Coe (1760 — 1841), m. Mary Hall ********=Benson Coe (1793 — 1862), m. Esther Ward
*********|Harlow Ward Coe (1816 — 1895), m. Mary Scoville **********=Nathan W. Coe (1845 — 1943), m. Esther Melvina Churchill
*********|Harlow Ward Coe (1816 — 1895), m. Mary Scoville **********=Nathan W. Coe (1845 — 1943), m. Esther Melvina Churchill
American colonial
Robert Coe (1596 – bef. 1690) was an early English settler, public official, and a founder of the New Haven Colony and five towns in Connecticut and New York: Wethersfield, Stamford, Hempstead, Elmhurst, and Jamaica. Coe took passage from England to the Americas in 1634 during the Puritan migration to New England. He is considered the founder of the Coe family in America and was the primary progenitor in New England of Coes. He has many notable descendants, including the 43rd President of the United States, George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, the screenwriter of Gone with the Wind, Sidney Howard, and the namesake of the largest state park in Northern California, Henry W. Coe State Park.
In England, Coe began his career as a public official with an election to the overseer of cloth. In the New Netherland settlements, he held appointed positions as a magistrate and a deputy of the General Court. Under the governance of the New England Colonies, he was appointed as commissioner of Jamaica, and the judge and high sheriff of Yorkshire, New York.
Family history


The Coe family, originally recorded as “le Queu” and then “Coo”,[1] were Normans considered gentry and acquired their wealth through the cloth trade.[2][3][4] The name was derived from Old Norse “ka” meaning jackdaw, which is also the meaning of Coe in Old English. The English heraldry of the Coe family uses the martlet, a small black bird like the jackdaw. The birds on his supplementary seals had legs, unlike the mythical martlet, more closely resembling the jackdaw. The first Coe was probably known as “the Jackdaw”.[4]
In the 14th century, John Coo, the earliest known historical direct ancestor of Coe, served with John Hawkwood in the White Company.[5][4] He was awarded the title of knight by Edward III of England for the Battle of San Gallo in 1364. He established the Hawkwood Chantries in Hedingham Castle in honor of Hawkwood. He is referred to as “Cocco” by Italian historians.[6][4][7][8] Many of Coo’s descendants resided at Hedingham, were educated at the Inner Temple, practiced law, held offices in England, and were extensive landowners. One Coo was listed as a justice of the peace in Essex, others became lords. Many were yeomen, gentlemen, and esquires. 17th century lord of the manor John Coo owned many lands, including at Hedingham.[4][9]
Biography

Coe was born to Henry and Mary Coe (née Vincent) at Thorpe Morieux, Suffolk, England, and baptized there on October 26, 1596.[4] He was described as a “fine example” of a Puritan and a “great force of character” by J. Gardner Bartlett, the American genealogist.[10] His father, Henry, had been a yeoman, probably a clothmaker, and for several years was churchwarden.[4] He was burned at the stake for a shift in his religious beliefs.[11]
In Boxford, Suffolk in April 1625, Coe was elected as the overseer of cloth and in 1629 as the questman of the church.[12] His first wife and mother of his four children died in Boxford in 1628. He remarried shortly after. His only daughter, a twin to his middle son, died before 1634.[4]
Historical records refer to him as “The Founder of the Coe Family in America”.[4][13][14][15] He and his family left for America on April 10, 1634[16][17] in search of religious liberty from Ipswich aboard the Francis, commanded by John Cutting.[18][4] Coe settled for a year in Watertown, a Boston suburb in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, with several other Puritan families from Boxford who arrived with John Winthrop. He was made a Freeman, but soon left the area due to overcrowding with permission of the General Court.[4][19][20][12]
Coe was a founder of two towns in the Connecticut Colony[5] and a founder of the New Haven Colony.[21] In June 1635, Coe joined Andrew Warde and a few others in starting a new plantation at Wethersfield (originally Pyquag),[22][1] in the fertile Connecticut River Valley, where he lived for five years.[4][1] A division within the church caused Coe, Warde, and eighteen others to form the Rippowam Company, with the intent of acquiring Rippowam lands from the New Haven Colony.[4][23][24][25] The land had been previously purchased from the Siwanoy peoples.[26] In 1640, Coe and Warde were designated by the general court as representatives in colonial government matters; they secured the land and founded a new plantation called Toquams, later renamed Stamford.[4][23][24] Stamford was included in the creation of the United Colonies of New England.[24] On April 5, 1643, Coe was appointed as Stamford’s magistrate,[4] the equivalent of a mayor.[18] The following year, another dispute caused Coe and the town reverend, Richard Denton, to leave the British colonies in favor of the New Netherland settlements.[4][1]
They crossed the Long Island Sound to what is now Long Island and founded Hempstead, where Coe was appointed the magistrate and the church elder. During his eight years leading Hempstead, he became an extensive landowner.[4][1][25] In 1652, Coe and Edward Jessup became the majority landowners of a settlement west of Long Island in what is now Elmhurst. The town was originally called Middleburgh, then Hastings, and finally Newtown. Coe was made the town’s magistrate and served for four years as a deputy of the general court,[4][18] the same “representative” government style as in the British colonies.[27] As the deputy, Coe traveled in 1653 to Boston and New Amsterdam to ask for protection against a threatened Native attack.[4][18][28]
After the settlement was well-established, Coe relocated again in 1655 to Rustdorp, a town on a large tract of land south of Newtown, which he purchased along with his youngest son Benjamin and several others. Rustdorp was later renamed Jamaica. Peter Stuyvesant appointed Coe magistrate of the town under the jurisdiction of New Netherland, an office Coe held until 1664.[4][1] When the English population on Long Island revolted against Dutch rule and transferred their allegiance to Connecticut, Coe was designated as commissioner for Jamaica under British auspices. After New Amsterdam surrendered to the English fleet, New York governor Richard Nicolls appointed Coe as the judge of oyer and terminer of Yorkshire. His final position was as high sheriff of Yorkshire until 1671, after which he retired from public office at the age of 75.[4][25][29]
Near the end of his life, Coe settled his estate among his three sons. He married a third wife when he was over 80 years of age. He bought a farm of fifty acres at Foster’s Meadow in Hempstead on November 29, 1678, where he lived until his death (which occurred sometime before 1690, when his will was executed).[4] His estates in Connecticut and England in 1900 were valued at $308 million dollars (around $10 billion in 2025).[11] His home on Long Island stood until 1930, when it was demolished to accommodate the construction of the Long Island Expressway.[30]
Legacy
The Bay View area of Freeport, New York, was originally named “Coe’s Neck”, after Coe, and remains the name of a local park.[31][32] Cos Cob, Connecticut is named after Coe, derived from “Coe’s Cob” meaning “Coe’s wall”.[33]
Coe has many notable descendants and towns and important landmarks bearing the names of his descendants. Coe Township, Michigan is named after George Coe, Lieutenant Governor of Michigan[34] and Coe Township, Rock Island County, Illinois is named for Albert S. Coe who served in the Illinois General Assembly and developed the area’s agricultural industry.[4][35] Coe, Indiana is named for one of the founders of Indianapolis and a frontier physician, Isaac Coe.[4][36][37][38]
The namesake of Henry W. Coe State Park, the largest state park in Northern California and the second largest state park in the state and popular campground Coe Ranch,[39][40][41] Henry Willard Coe Jr.[4] The visitor center near Homestead, Florida of Everglades National Park is named for descendant Ernest F. Coe, who founded the park.[42] Mount Coe and Coe Glacier are named for Henry Coe,[43] a naturalist and journalist who ascended Mount Adams in the 19th century.[44] He platted the town of Hood River, Oregon, which was settled by Nathaniel Coe, a pioneer politician and his father.[45][4] They cultivated the Hood River Valley with fruit trees.[46][47][44]
Coe College,[48] is named for Daniel Coe, another descendant,[4] and Coe Elementary School in Seattle is named after descendant Frantz Hunt Coe, though the original building burned down in 2001.[49][50] Coe Circle, a park in Portland, Oregon, is named after descendant Henry Waldo Coe,[51][4] where he commissioned the installation of a gilt bronze statue of Joan of Arc.[52] Dudley Coe Hall at Bowdoin College, formerly the infirmary, is named for the son of Thomas Upham Coe, an alumnus, who was a prominent doctor and lumber baron of Bangor, Maine.[53][54][55] Portraits of Thomas Upham Coe are in the Smithsonian Libraries and Archives[56] and the Harvard Art Museums.[57] Coe Hall at Wiley University was named for Herman Gurnee Coe, the commissioner of Cedar County, Iowa,[4] and his daughter, Isabel, who taught there.[58][59]
Coe’s second great grandson, Jonas Coe,[4] fought alongside George Washington in the American Revolutionary War. He served in the Commander-in-Chief’s Guard in the Battle of Long Island and gave the military sermon upon Washington’s death after having become a reverend.[60][61][62][63]
Notable descendants
Tree of notable descendants
- Henry Coe (1555 — 1630), m. Mary Vincent
- Robert Coe Sr. (1596 – 1690), m. Mary
- John Coe Sr. (1625 — 1693)
- John Coe Jr. (1657 — 1735)
- Samuel Coe Sr. (1672 — 1742), m. Margaret Van Zandt
- Samuel Coe Jr. (1718 — 1759), m. Phebe Seaman
- William Coe (1748 — 1829), m. Martha Connelly
- John Coe I (1784 — 1818), m. Polly Cooper
- John Coe II (1814 — 1892), m. Katharine Hopper
- John Coe I (1784 — 1818), m. Polly Cooper
- William Coe (1748 — 1829), m. Martha Connelly
- John Coe (1719 — 1782), m. Hannah Halstead
- Jonas Coe (1759 — 1822), m. Elizabeth Miller
- Daniel Coe (1730 — 1777), m. Sarah Palmer
- John D. Coe (1755 — 1777), m. Sarah Coe
- Hannah Coe (1784 — 1837), m. Halstead Gurnee
- Dolly Coe (1800 — 1887), m. Peter Post
- Edwin Post (1821 — 1893), m. Mary Doolittle
- Freeman Post (1875 — 1889), m. Miriam Colcord
- Edwin Post (1821 — 1893), m. Mary Doolittle
- Matthew Coe (1757 — 1838), m. Martha Gurnee
- Stephen Coe (1787 — 1838), m. Leah Henion
- Matthew Coe (1815 — 1872), m. Susan Farwell
- Matthew D. Coe (1797 — 1881), m. Ruth Deyo
- Stephen Coe (1787 — 1838), m. Leah Henion
- John D. Coe (1755 — 1777), m. Sarah Coe
- Samuel Coe Jr. (1718 — 1759), m. Phebe Seaman
- Robert Coe Jr. (1626 — 1659), m. Hannah Mitchell
- John Coe Sr. (1658 — 1741), m. Mary Hawley
- Robert Coe (1684 — 1762), m. Barbara Parmalee
- Jonathan Coe (1710 — 1795), m. Elizabeth Elmer
- Robert Coe (1740 — 1830), m. Chloe Thrall
- Roswell Coe (1780 — 1825), m. Polly Porter
- Willis Coe (1819 — 1912), m. Hannah Fenton
- George Washington Coe (1843 — 1920), m. Lois Ann Ives
- George Henry Coe (1882 — 1967), m. Blanch Mays
- Jack Coe Sr. (1918 — 1956), m. Juanita Scott
- George Henry Coe (1882 — 1967), m. Blanch Mays
- George Washington Coe (1843 — 1920), m. Lois Ann Ives
- Willis Coe (1819 — 1912), m. Hannah Fenton
- Roswell Coe (1780 — 1825), m. Polly Porter
- Robert Coe (1740 — 1830), m. Chloe Thrall
- Mary Coe (1717 — 1789), (m. 2nd) James Crampton
- Molly Crampton (1748 — 1797), m. James Kilbourn
- Hiram Kilbourn (1786 — 1847), m. Eliza Seaman
- Sarah Kilbourn (1839 — 1903), m. Elezear Bishop
- Hiram Kilbourn (1786 — 1847), m. Eliza Seaman
- Molly Crampton (1748 — 1797), m. James Kilbourn
- Thomas Coe (1727 — 1810), m. Mary Goodell
- Zachariah Coe (1757 — 1841), m. Miriam Calkins
- Cyrus Coe (1786 — 1853), m. Elsie Fenton
- Nathaniel Coe (1836 — 1917), m. Emma Stinton
- Cyrus Coe (1786 — 1853), m. Elsie Fenton
- Zachariah Coe (1757 — 1841), m. Miriam Calkins
- Levi Coe (1760 — 1832), (m. 2nd) Deborah McCall
- Walter Coe (1798 — 1868), m. Mariana Kilbourne
- Edward Coe (1834 — 1909), m. Louisa Bonney
- Levi Coe (1810 — 1832), m. Lavinia McNeil
- Walter Coe (1798 — 1868), m. Mariana Kilbourne
- Jonathan Coe (1710 — 1795), m. Elizabeth Elmer
- Joseph Coe Sr. (1686 — 1754), m. Abigail Robinson
- Joseph Coe Jr. (1713 — 1784), m. Abigail Curtiss
- James Coe Sr. (1740 — 1794), m. Rachel Benton
- James Coe Jr. (1769 — 1845), m. Nancy Pratt
- Almon Coe (1796 — 1853), m. Climena Spelman
- James Coe Jr. (1769 — 1845), m. Nancy Pratt
- Curtis Coe (1750 — 1829), m. Anne Thompson
- Eben Coe (1785 — 1862), (m. 1st) Mehitable Smith, (m. 2nd) Mary Upham
- Ebenezer Coe (1755 — 1839), m. Cleopatra Conklin
- Joel Coe (1758 — 1846), m. Huldah Horton
- Nathaniel Coe (1788 — 1868), m. Mary White
- Henry C. Coe (1844 — 1928), m. Kittie Carlton
- Lawrence Coe (1831 — 1897), m. Mary Graves
- Helen Coe (1860 — 1946), m. John Howard Sr.
- Curtis Coe (1797 — 1871), m. Hannah Clark
- Joel Horton Coe (1827 — 1905), (m. 1st) Wealthy Clark
- Arthur Edwin Coe (1854 — 1924), m. Minnie Lees
- Robert E. Coe Sr. (1880 — 1970), m. Mary Shoemaker
- Curtis C. Coe (1911 — 1996), m. Pearl Haney
- Robert E. Coe Jr. (1915 — 2003), m. Ethel Sanders
- Robert E. Coe Sr. (1880 — 1970), m. Mary Shoemaker
- Arthur Edwin Coe (1854 — 1924), m. Minnie Lees
- Curtis N. Coe (1830 — 1908), m. Martha Hammond
- Joel Horton Coe (1827 — 1905), (m. 1st) Wealthy Clark
- Nathaniel Coe (1788 — 1868), m. Mary White
- James Coe Sr. (1740 — 1794), m. Rachel Benton
- David Coe (1715 — 1807), m. Hannah Camp
- Jesse Coe Sr. (1743 — 1824), m. Abigail Miller
- Ezra Coe (1796 — 1869), m. Elizabeth Somberger
- George Coe (1831 — 1906), m. Harriet Van Voorhis
- Ezra Coe (1796 — 1869), m. Elizabeth Somberger
- Eli Coe Sr. (1758 — 1835), m. Rachel Miller
- Eli Coe Jr. (1784 — 1847), m. Lois Coe
- Isaac Coe (1816 — 1899), m. Sarah Bacon
- Eli Coe Jr. (1784 — 1847), m. Lois Coe
- Jesse Coe Sr. (1743 — 1824), m. Abigail Miller
- Josiah Coe (1723 — 1798), m. Hannah
- Phineas Coe (1753 — 1832), m. Rhoda Banning
- Anson Coe (1784 — 1856), m. Anna Haynes
- Hayden Coe (1811 — 1862), (m. 2nd) Josephine Lumpkin
- Hayden Lumpkin Coe (1860 — 1904), m. Sara Hughes
- Frederick Hayden Hughs Coe Sr. (1884 — 1914), m. Annette Harrell
- Fred Coe Jr. (1914 — 1979), m. Alice Griggs
- Frederick Hayden Hughs Coe Sr. (1884 — 1914), m. Annette Harrell
- Hayden Lumpkin Coe (1860 — 1904), m. Sara Hughes
- Hayden Coe (1811 — 1862), (m. 2nd) Josephine Lumpkin
- Anson Coe (1784 — 1856), m. Anna Haynes
- Phineas Coe (1753 — 1832), m. Rhoda Banning
- Joseph Coe Jr. (1713 — 1784), m. Abigail Curtiss
- John Coe Jr. (1693 — 1751), m. Hannah Parsons
- Simeon Coe Sr. (1721 — 1782), m. Anna Morris
- Simeon Coe Jr. (1755 — 1838), m. Eunice Strong
- Simeon Maltby Coe (1784 – 1848), m. Mary Miles
- George Coe (1811 — 1869), (m. 1st) Almira Mason, (m. 2nd) Rhoda Mason
- Albert S. Coe (1817 — 1869), (m. 2nd) Lucy Cornelia Hollister
- Jonathan Coe (1819 — 1885), (m. 2nd) Sarah Murray
- Decius O. Coe (1820 — 1870), m. Eveline Stevens
- Simeon Maltby Coe (1784 – 1848), m. Mary Miles
- Simeon Coe Jr. (1755 — 1838), m. Eunice Strong
- Simeon Coe Sr. (1721 — 1782), m. Anna Morris
- Ephraim Coe Sr. (1698 — 1765), m. Hannah Comfort
- Ephraim Coe Jr. (1724 — 1778), m. Anne Canfield
- Daniel Coe (1755 — 1820), m. Martha
- Daniel Coe (1794 — 1872), (m. 2nd) Mercy Wattles
- Seth Coe (1771 — 1816), m. Eunice Roberts
- Orris Coe (1815 — 1895), m. Paulina Bushnell
- Daniel Coe (1755 — 1820), m. Martha
- Ephraim Coe Jr. (1724 — 1778), m. Anne Canfield
- Abigail Coe (1702 — 1747), m. John Guthrie
- Sarah Guthrie (1744 — 1792), m. Reuben Murray
- Aurora Murray (1785 — 1867), m. Isaac Jerome
- Sarah Guthrie (1744 — 1792), m. Reuben Murray
- Robert Coe (1684 — 1762), m. Barbara Parmalee
- John Coe Sr. (1658 — 1741), m. Mary Hawley
- Benjamin Coe I (1628 — 1694), m. Abigail Carman
- Joseph Coe I (1665 — 1742), m. Judith Wheeler
- Joseph Coe II (1704 — 1760), m. Esther
- Joseph Coe III (1738 — 1825), m. Abigail Moone
- Joseph Coe IV (1768 — 1842), m. Mary Gibbons
- Joseph Gibbons Coe (1796 — 1855), m. Sarah Winans
- Sylvester Coe (1821 — 1891), m. Ann Rowland
- Joseph Gibbons Coe (1796 — 1855), m. Sarah Winans
- Joseph Coe IV (1768 — 1842), m. Mary Gibbons
- Joseph Coe III (1738 — 1825), m. Abigail Moone
- Benjamin Coe (1709 — 1800), m. Rachel Prudden
- Moses Coe (1750 — 1813), m. Sarah Howell
- Jeanette Coe (1782 — 1865), m. John Gibson
- William Harvey Gibson (1821 – 1894), m. Martha Creeger
- James Gibson (1823 – 1898), m. Margaret Poole
- Albert Gibson (1851 — 1909), m. Lillian Griffith
- Daniel Coe (1801 — 1851), m. Mary Gladden
- Sarah Coe (1831 — 1901), m. John Robinson
- James E. Robinson (1868 — 1932), m. Lula Flickinger
- Pauline Robinson (1896 — 1949), m. Marvin Pierce
- James E. Robinson (1868 — 1932), m. Lula Flickinger
- Sarah Coe (1831 — 1901), m. John Robinson
- Jeanette Coe (1782 — 1865), m. John Gibson
- Moses Coe (1750 — 1813), m. Sarah Howell
- Joseph Coe II (1704 — 1760), m. Esther
- Benjamin Coe II (1660 — 1707), m. Mary Everett
- Benjamin Coe III (1702 — 1788), m. Abigail
- Benjamin Coe IV (1738 — 1818), m. Bethia Grummon
- Abigail Coe (1776 — 1853), m. William Whitehead
- William Adee Whitehead (1810), m. Margaret Parker
- Cortlandt Whitehead (1842 — 1922), m. Charlotte Burgoyne King
- John Whitehead (1869 — 1934), m. Martha Sharpe
- Cortlandt Whitehead (1842 — 1922), m. Charlotte Burgoyne King
- William Adee Whitehead (1810), m. Margaret Parker
- Aaron Coe (1779 — 1857), m. Catherine Elmer
- Abigail Coe (1776 — 1853), m. William Whitehead
- Benjamin Coe IV (1738 — 1818), m. Bethia Grummon
- Benjamin Coe III (1702 — 1788), m. Abigail
- Joseph Coe I (1665 — 1742), m. Judith Wheeler
- John Coe Sr. (1625 — 1693)
- Robert Coe Sr. (1596 – 1690), m. Mary
Sources:[4][64][65][66][67][68][69][70][71][45][72][73][74][75][76][77][42][78][79][80][81][82]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f Cutter, William Richard (2018). New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial. Vol. 4. Forgotten Books. ISBN 978-0282987978.
- ^ Thompson, Roger (1993). “The Uprooted or ‘Worlds in Motion’: East Anglian founders of New England 1629-1640”. Parergon. 11 (2): 1–15. doi:10.1353/pgn.1993.0063. ISSN 1832-8334.
- ^ Kalu, Ogbu U. (1978). “Continuity in Change: Bishops of London and Religious Dissent in Early Stuart England”. Journal of British Studies. 18 (1): 28–45. doi:10.1086/385727. ISSN 0021-9371.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Bartlett, J. Gardner (1911). Robert Coe, Puritan. Published for private circulation. ISBNÂ 9780598765826.
- ^ a b Bicknell, Thomas Williams (2022). The History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. Vol. 3. Legare Street Press. ISBN 9781019040492.
- ^ “The Coe family of Union County”. Marysville Journal-Tribune. April 2, 2010.
- ^ “Americana”. American Historical Magazine. Vol. 14. The American Historical Society. 1920.
- ^ Wright, Thomas (2019). The History and Topography of Essex. Vol. 1. HardPress.
- ^ Cutter, William Richard, ed. (1919). American Biography. Vol. 6. American Historical Company.
- ^ Page, Susan (2019). The matriarch: Barbara Bush and the making of an American dynasty (First ed.). New York: Twelve. ISBN 978-1-5387-1364-8. OCLC 1032584246.
- ^ a b “Robert Coe’s Estate”. The Fort Scott Weekly Tribune. April 26, 1900. p. 2.
- ^ a b Ellis, Ruby Haskins (March 21, 1935). “Who Are You?: The Romance of Your Name”. The Evening Star.
- ^ Burrell, David James; Cobb, Henry Evertson (2016). A Discourse Commemorative Of The Reverend Edward Benton Coe (illustrated ed.). New York: Creative Media Partners, LLC. ISBN 9781354722275.
- ^ Dow, George Francis (1988). Every day life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. New York: Dover Publications. ISBNÂ 978-0-486-25565-1.
- ^ American Biographical Institute, ed. (1992). American women of today (1st ed.). Raleigh, N.C: American Biographical Institute. ISBN 978-0-934544-63-4.
- ^ Burpee, Charles Winslow (1939). Burpee’s The Story of Connecticut. Connecticut: American historical Company, Inc.
- ^ Call, Charles Arthur; Call, Elizabeth Coe; McEwen, John Donald (1952). Anecdotes of the Ancestors and Descendants of Albert Coe and Deborah Prentice. University of Wisconsin – Madison.
- ^ a b c d Simon Middleton (2010). “Order and Authority in New Netherland: The 1653 Remonstrance and Early Settlement Politics”. The William and Mary Quarterly. 67 (1): 31. doi:10.5309/willmaryquar.67.1.31. JSTORÂ 10.5309/willmaryquar.67.1.31.
- ^ Hinman, Royal Ralph (1852). A Catalogue of the Names of the Early Puritan Settlers of the Colony of Connecticut. Press of Case, Tiffany, and Company.
- ^ Rockey, John L., ed. (1892). History of New Haven County, Connecticut. Vol. 1. W. W. Preston.
- ^ Lambert, Edward Rodolphus (1838). History of New Haven. Oxford University.
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