The Pilgrim Fathers
The Pilgrims, or Pilgrim Fathers, were a group of English religious dissenters who experienced discrimination in England and, in search of religious freedom, left England to migrate to the Netherlands and later North America.
They founded colony at Plymouth (in modern-day Massachusetts) in 1620 (it was just the second English colony in America, the first having been established at Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607).
Historic Mayflower Steps
The Spot in England From Where the Pilgrim Fathers Set Sail for America
Historic Mayflower Steps
This is where the Mayflower left Plymouth in England in 1620 to go to the New World. The Thanksgiving Day of the USA is in memory of this event.
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Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War
Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War
Amazon Price: $10.88 (as of 10/12/2008)
Beyond Turkeys, Cranberry Sauce, Tall Hats, and Buckled Shoes
Nathaniel Philbrick's remarkable "Mayflower" is everything you'd hope a history book to be: illuminating, lively, and authoritative. This was simply a terrific read, a fascinating glimpse into the events and people serving as the first bricks in our nation's foundation.
Beyond the fairytale images of "The First Thanksgiving", most basic American history skips from the Mayflower's 1620 landing in Plymouth the American Revolution, glossing over the rich and brawling century-and-a-half spanning these two events. Philbrick zeroes in on the first half-century, stripping away the myth and homily typically associated with the Pilgrims and laying bare a fascinating tale of courage and deceit, of trusts forged and broken, of politics, religion, brutality, and war. All the familiar figures are there - William Bradford, Miles Standish, Pokanoket Indian chief Massoit, Squanto, and Edward Winslow, but Philbrick focuses on less celebrated figures like Benjamin Church and Massoit's son Phillip, who while hardy household names today leave behind legacies that helped shape what would become a century later the United States of America.
This is a story ripe with opportunity for politically correct revisionism, but the author walks a balanced line, alternately praising and condemning the deeds and players of both the English and the Native Americans. We learn, for example, that near-starvation in the first two years had as much to do with the Pilgrim's failed experiment in socialism as it did with harsh winters and poor soil. This led Bradford to adopt a policy allowing each family to grow and hunt not for the "commonwealth", but for themselves. Thanks to Bradford's newly discovered spirit of capitalism, the colony is soon producing a surplus of food. There may be a perverse humor in the irony of contemporary images of God-fearing Pilgrims in tall hats and buckled shoes when matched with the reality of a people who would draw and quarter their enemies and display their heads on pikes. But this is no less naive than euphemistic views of New England's "peaceful and noble Indians", who in fact warred with rival tribes for centuries before the arrival of the Europeans, and showed no lack of talent or imagination for treachery, torture, and manipulation.
In short, "Mayflower" is that rare historical chronicle that reads with the all intrigue and energy of well-written novel, and important expose of an overlooked period of our history with lessons as relevant today as they were three centuries ago. Well done, Mr. Philbrick.
The Pilgrim Fathers (article)
Sourcec: Wapedia
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