Elizabeth Cock

Brief Life History of Elizabeth

When Elizabeth Cock was born on 12 March 1747, in Oyster Bay Town, Queens, New York Colony, British Colonial America, her father, Josiah Cock, was 37 and her mother, Rebecca Frost, was 32. She married Joshua Cock on 12 March 1780. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 1 daughter. She died on 2 February 1826, in North Castle, Westchester, New York, United States, at the age of 78.

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Family Time Line

Joshua Cock
1755–1828
Elizabeth Cock
1747–1826
Marriage: 12 March 1780
Martha Cox
1781–1845
Robert Cocks
1786–1866

Sources (8)

  • Elizabeth Cock, "New York, County Marriages, 1847-1848; 1908-1936"
  • Will of Josiah Cook
  • Elizabeth Cock, "New York, County Marriages, 1847-1848; 1908-1936"

Spouse and Children

World Events (6)

1776

Thomas Jefferson's American Declaration of Independence endorsed by Congress. Colonies declare independence.

1776

New York is the 11th state.

1788 · The First Presidential Election

The First Presidential election was held in the newly created United States of America. Under the Articles of Confederation, the executive branch of the country was not set up for an individual to help lead the nation. So, under the United States Constitution they position was put in. Because of his prominent roles during the Revolutionary War, George Washington was voted in unanimously as the First President of the United States.

Name Meaning

1 English: (i) occupational name from Middle English cok ‘cook’, a possible variant of Cook if shortening of the vowel of Old English cōc ‘cook’ occurred before it developed to Middle English coke, couk, cook. In examples of Coc and Cok below, the vowel may be short or long, so they could alternatively be cited under Cook . (ii) nickname from Middle English cok (Old English and Old French coc) ‘male bird, cock’ (especially the male of the domestic fowl), perhaps used humorously of a leader or chief man in a social group, though this sense is not recorded before the 16th century in OED . Some of the following early bearers may alternatively belong under other senses below.

2 English: relationship name occasionally perhaps from the Middle English personal name Cok, of uncertain origin. For possible early bearers of the surname see examples without the definite article in (1) above.

3 English: (i) locative name from Middle English cok (Old English cocc) ‘hillock, haycock, heap’, denoting someone who lived by a hillock or mound. (ii) occupational name from Middle English cok, cok(k)e ‘ship’s boat’, and used for a boatman. Compare Barge . (iii) locative name, occupational name for someone who lived or worked or at a house or inn distinguished by a sign depicting a haycock or mound, a boat, or a cock bird (see the senses above).

Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland © University of the West of England 2016

Possible Related Names

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