1745. HAWKE CUSHING
Sex: M
Birth: 13 February 1745 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
Death: 16 February 1825 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
Christening: 17 February 1745 Second Church of Scituate, Scituate, Massachusetts

Hawke resided in Scituate. "Hawke Cushing was a carpenter and builder. The Mill that he is said to have built after his purchase of the Deacon Bryant estate, about 1769 was operated by his brother Pickels Cushing and a generation later by Pickels Jr." He was a Private in the Revolutionary War.

Father: Joseph Cushing b: 25 November 1711 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
Mother: Lydia King b: 26 December 1716 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts

Marriage 1: Ruth Cushing b: 24 April 1747
Married: 28 September 1769 in Pembroke, Plymouth, Massachusetts

Children:
1. Thomas Cushing b: 25 October 1770 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
2. Ruth Cushing b: 10 November 1772 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
3. Isaac Cushing b: 28 December 1775 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
4. Sarah Cushing b: 5 February 1778 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
5. Lemuel Cushing, Capt. b: 4 April 1780 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
6. Nancy Cushing b: 6 June 1782 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
7. Clarissa Cushing b: 21 May 1784 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts
8. Charlotte Cushing b: 12 July 1786 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts, d: 1881

Marriage 2: Abigail Clapp b: 2 December 1750
Married: 4 November 1792 in Second Church of Scituate, Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts

Sources:
1. The Genealogy of the Cushing Family (An account of the Ancestors and Descendants of Matthew Cushing, who came to America in 1638) by James Cushing, The Perrault Printing Co - Montreal, 1905. First Edition, 1877, by Lemuel Cushing, D1881 (Finished by his family).
2. Vital Records of Scituate, Massachusetts to the Year 1850, NEHGS, Boston, 1909, two volumes.
3. Old Scituate, 1921 Chief Justice Cushing Chapter DAR
4. George C. Turner, "Records of the Second Church of Scituate, now the First Unitarian Church of Norwell, Massachusetts," New Eng. Hist. Gen. Reg.