Manchester Evening News

David found his dad and then a founding father

HE TRACKS DOWN GI AFTER 25 YEARS PAND LATER DISCOVERS A RELATION ON PILGRIMS’ MAYFLOWER

- By ALEX SCAPENS newsdesk@men-news.co.uk @MENnewsdes­k

AN amateur historian has found he is descended from one of the pilgrims who helped colonise America.

David Hulme, from Heaton Mersey, Stockport, traced his family tree and discovered he is related to Stephen Hopkins, who was among those who travelled to America on the Mayflower in 1620.

The 72-year-old believes he is only the third European to have proved a family line from one of the 30 passengers on the famous ship.

He made the discovery after 25 years trying to track down his father, who was an American GI stationed in Stockport during World War II.

David, a former broadcast journalist, said: “It has been absolutely life-changing, I spent a quarter of a century trying to track down my father and thought I would go to the grave not knowing.

“Then it all happened so quickly. Now I know I’m descended from the settlers who were on the Mayflower, the main event at the start of America.

“So far, I’ve traced 30 ancestors in America. I can’t tell you how exciting it is. I have to pinch myself.”

David, who has a son, a daughter and two grandchild­ren, began his search after his grandmothe­r’s friend told him he was fathered by a GI named John Bell.

But his mother, who passed away in 1997, became upset at the revelation and refused to give him any more details.

After a fruitless search of more than two decades, David submitted a DNA sample to organisati­on GI Trace, which returned with the answer.

It was found that Allan Russell Edwards, who served with the 837 Ordnance Depot Unit, was his father and ‘John Bell’ was an assumed name.

Sadly Allan developed MS in 1949, which led to his early death.

David has now traced a half-sister, who he has spoken to, a half-brother and two cousins.

And following further research, the latest twist has seen the Mayflower Society use its records to confirm the links between David and Stephen Hopkins.

Adventurer Stephen was born in Hampshire in 1581 and had 10 children with two different wives.

He survived being shipwrecke­d and later was sentenced to death for mutiny in Bermuda before his 66-day voyage to America.

He became an assistant governor in Plymouth, Massachuse­tts.

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