Well, "Senith" isn't exactly a name, but a phonetic spelling, like so many other such cases. One of my own ancestresses was an Asenath, occasionally seen in records as "Senith". I imagine it was pronounced "a-SEE-nith", snd it may have been that she was familiarly called "Senith". Clerks wrote what they knew, and if they didn't know, what they heard. I've encountered an occasional other Senith, too, and a couple of similar things, whence my instant guess. But I see no Hopkins hints for you in Delmarva references in my files here. John <joslake@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >"Senith" is a completely new name to me (and I just went thru a colonial/biblical >names site which Google found for me) but it might very well match the penciled >notation on the Dover Archives typewritten copy of the 1741 will which the will >typist or editor saw & pencilled as "Senot" (after typing Tenot).