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         Pilgrim Fathers:     more books (100)
  1. Meet the Pilgrim Fathers by Elizabeth Payne, 1966-11-12
  2. Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers of the Colony of Plymouth, 1602-1625 by Alexander Young, 1971-06
  3. John Robinson, Pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers, A Study of His Life and Times by Burgess, Walter H, 2009-08-19
  4. Saints and Strangers, Being the Lives of the Pilgrim Fathers and Their Families by George F. Willison, 1983-09
  5. Defenders of the Faith: Religion and Politics from the Pilgrim Fathers to Ronald Reagan by Wilbur Edel, 1987-03-04
  6. Saints and strangers: Being the lives of the Pilgrim Fathers and their families, with their friends and foes, and an account of their posthumous wanderings ... and the strange pilgrimages of Plymouth Rock by George Findlay Willison, 1964
  7. Saints and Strangers: Being the Lives of the Pilgrim Fathers and Their Families, with Their Friends and Foes, and an Account of the Posthumous Wanderings ... and the Strange Pilgrimages of Plymouth Rock by George F. Willison, 1981
  8. English Separatist Tradition from the Marian Martyrs to the Pilgrim Fathers (Oxford Theological Monographs) by Barrington Raymond White, 1971-07-01
  9. The Story of the Pilgrim Fathers, 1606-1623 A. D.: As Told by Themselves, Their Friends, and Their Enemies, Pages 1-866 by Edward Arber, 2010-03-23
  10. The story of the Pilgrim fathers, 1606-1623 A.D. : as told by themselves, their friends, and their e by Arber, Edward, 2009-05-20
  11. The founding of a nation; the story of the Pilgrim fathers, their voyage on the Mayflower, their early struggles, hardships and dangers, and the beginnings ... the journals of Francis Beaumont, cavalier by Frank Moody Gregg, 2010-08-14
  12. Chronicles Of The Pilgrim Fathers Of The Colony Of Plymouth, From 1602-1625 by Alexander Young, 2010-09-10
  13. The Pilgrim Fathers: Or, the Founders of New England in the Reign of James the First by William Henry Bartlett, 2010-03-08
  14. Homes And Haunts Of The Pilgrim Fathers (1899) by Alexander Mackennal, 2010-09-10

1. Pilgrims
The story of New England s Pilgrim Fathers. Part of an etext on thehistory of the United States. The Pilgrim Fathers. Introduction
http://www.usahistory.info/New-England/Pilgrims.html
Founding Fathers Home Page US History E-Text New England
The Pilgrim Fathers
Introduction to Colonization of New England
Massachusetts Bay
Connecticut
Rhode Island and Providence
... New Hampshire
The Separatists were less numerous by far than other classes of Nonconformists, yet they formed the advance guard of the great Puritan exodus from the mother country to the shores of New England. The town of Scrooby in Nottinghamshire was the center of a scattered congregation of Separatists whose minister was John Robinson and whose ruling elder was William Brewster, the village postmaster. After enduring many persecutions this little band of Christians, who now became "Pilgrims," escaped with difficulty from their native land to Amsterdam, Holland, whence a year later they removed to Leyden. Here they dwelt for eleven years, exiles for conscience' sake, earning their bread by the labor of their hands. But the Pilgrims felt that Holland was not their home; they could not endure the thought of giving up their language and customs for those of the Dutch, nor were they willing to return to their native England, where religious persecution had not abated. They had heard of the colony of Virginia , and their thoughts were directed to the wilderness of the New World.

2. The Pilgrim Fathers
The Pilgrim Fathers by Brenda Ralph Lewis THE Pilgrim Fathers Ever since the Spaniardsbecame the first Europeans to colonise America, this ÔNew WorldÕ
http://www.britannia.com/history/pilgrim.html
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The Pilgrim Fathers
by Brenda Ralph Lewis
THE PILGRIM FATHERS Ever since the Spaniards became the first Europeans to colonise America, this ÔNew WorldÕ possessed a dazzling reputation as a land of opportunity. Here, the shackles of poverty, restriction and injustice would magically fall away and in this second Garden of Eden, men and women could at long last be free to pursue their own destiny. It was, of course, a utopian dream and took no account of the perils that lurked in unknown territory which was already occupied by native Americans, not all of whom were friendly. Nevertheless, the dream was extremely potent, not only for those who sought AmericaÕs fabled wealth, but those whose consciences were chained by religious persecution.
The Protestant Reformation, which had begun in 1517, had reached England some twenty years later. As elsewhere in Europe, it spawned dissenting minorities who were rather more ascetic in the practice of their new faith than the Church of England which was Protestant in name, but was, effectively, Catholicism without the Pope. Of these, the plain-living Puritans who eschewed what they saw as the gaudy, papist show of the English church, were the most overt and became the most oppressed. In 1609, the Puritans found England so inimical that 35 of them left the country and settled at Leyden, in Holland. Holland was much more to their strict religious taste, but after ten years, the Puritans began to seek a better freedom than a patch in a foreign land.

3. Leiden Promotie VVV/ Stories Of.... Pilgrim Fathers
Pilgrim Fathers hen the Pilgrims fled from England to Holland to evade persecutionthey were but one of many groups seeking refuge in Leiden.
http://www.leidenpromotie.nl/english/destad/verhalen/pilgrim/csvp010.htm
Pilgrim Fathers
hen the Pilgrims fled from England to Holland to evade persecution they were but one of many groups seeking refuge in Leiden. Holland was tolerant, after feeling the Spanish terror and converting to a sober-minded Protestantism. Also, the economic advantages of this influx of artisans and craftsmen was recognized; the boom in the Leiden cloth industry owed a lot to the arrival of French and Flemish weavers.
The Pilgrims led a quiet life in Leiden between 1609 and 1620. They held their services in a chapel of the university. William Bradford was a member of the wool guild and reverend John Robinson lived in the spot where later the Jean Pesijn almshouses were built. Robinson stayed in Leiden, died and was buried in the Peter's Church in 1625. In the Pieterskerkchoorsteeg one can still find the house where William Brewster's Pilgrim Press produced dissident pamphlets which were smuggled to England. But peace and quiet wasn't enough for the Pilgrims. The tolerance they enjoyed also became a source of irritation. Too many different creeds and lifestyles influenced their offspring and after 12 years they decided to leave for the New World to found a society completely based on their convictions.
The Leiden American Pilgrim Museum in the Beschuitsteeg treats the Leiden stay of the Pilgrims.

4. The Stuarts - Pilgrim Fathers
Information about the Pilgrim Fathers The Stuarts. The Pilgrim Fathers. Bibliography/Further Information
http://www.historyonthenet.com/Stuarts/pilgrim_fathers.htm
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The Stuarts
The Pilgrim Fathers Background When James I came to the throne, he adopted a moderate Protestant religious policy. Both Catholics and Puritans were forbidden to practice their religions. Many extreme Puritans left England for Holland where Puritanism was accepted. In 1607 Walter Raleigh had founded the English colony of Virginia in America and companies had begun trading between the colony and England. Who were they? Thirty-five members of the radical, Puritan, English Separatist Church, who had fled to Holland to avoid persecution, were recruited by an English stock company to go to Virginia to protect their business interests. The stock company financed the venture which, when it left England, included 102 men, women and children. The Journey The Pilgrim Fathers set sail from Plymouth on 16th September 1620 in the 'Mayflower' captained by Myles Standish and steered a course for Virginia. The ship was a double-decked, three-masted vessel. However, a storm blew them off course and they reached land at Cape Cod which they subsequently renamed Plymouth Rock. Anchor was dropped on November 21st 1620.

5. Full Text Of Chronicles Of The Pilgrim Fathers By Ernest Rhys (ed)
Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers. Table of contents. Introduction. New England’sMemorial. Chapter 1. Chapter 2. Chapter 3. Chapter 4. Chapter 5. Chapter 6. Chapter7.
http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/60/107/
Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers Table of contents Introduction Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 ... Chapter 18 Created by PanEris using Melati Back Home Email this ... FAQ for more details.

6. Pilgrims. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
The name Pilgrim Fathers is given to those members who made the first crossing on the Mayflower. ed. 1965) and The Pilgrim Reader ( 1953); S. E
http://www.bartleby.com/65/pi/Pilgrims.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Pilgrims in American history, the group of separatists and other individuals who were the founders of

7. The Open Door Web Site : History : The Pilgrim Fathers
The Pilgrim Fathers. The Pilgrims were English Calvinists who, unlike the Puritans did not try to transform the Church of
http://www.saburchill.com/history/chapters/empires/0007.html
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The Pilgrim Fathers The Pilgrims were English Calvinists who, unlike the Puritans did not try to transform the Church of England, but actually left the Church to form an independent sect. This group appeared at the end of Elizabeth I's reign and in the early period of James I's reign. Since they were not in the king's Church (i.e. the Church of England), the Pilgrims were effectively outlaws in the early 17th century. Their pastors were fined, put in the stocks and whipped. Some of them who published pamphlets criticizing the king and his Church had their ears sliced off, their noses split and their foreheads branded with the letters 'SS' (stirrer of sedition). In 1607 a group of Pilgrims managed to escape to Holland which, at that time, was the only country with complete freedom of religion. Here they could worship as they pleased.
With the kind permission of Chris Fennell

8. Squanto--Yaffles & Yaffles
The life story of Squantum (Squanto), a native american who helped the Pilgrim Fathers.
http://www.baccalieu.com/squantum
"A stranger might think we were gone adrift. That is, until he knew about our moorin's and our holdin' ground." Ted RussellThe Holdin' Ground
You'd see my applet if you had a Java-capable browser.
Squantum (Squanto) and Cupids
On March 16, 1621, an important event occured for the Pilgrim Fathers. An Indian, Samoset, walked into their Plymouth settlement and called out "Welcome Englishmen, Welcome Englishmen." After he spoke, the Pilgrims whispered in amazement. The man spoke English. He seemed friendly, so the Pilgrims greeted him openly, yet cautiously. Samoset told them he would return with his friend who spoke better English. When he returned as he had promised, he brought not only his friend Squantum (Squanto,) but also Massasoit (the sachem or tribal chief.) Samoset indroduced Squantum to the Pilgrims as "a native of this place who had been in England and could speak better English than himself.(1)" With the help of Squantum's interpretation, Massasoit and Governor Carver made a peace treaty that would last for at least fifty more years.
Meeting the Pilgrims, From a Painting by Richard Williams, Scholastic Books.

9. New England Colonies
Introduction to Colonization of New England Pilgrim Fathers Massachusetts Bay Connecticut Rhode Island and Providence New Hampshire Also see New England
http://www.usahistory.info/New-England/
Founding Fathers Home Page US History E-Text New England
CHAPTER V Colonization
New England
Introduction to Colonization of New England
Pilgrim Fathers
Massachusetts Bay Connecticut
Rhode Island and Providence
... New Hampshire
Also see: New England Affairs
When North America was first settled by the English race the blessings of religious freedom had not yet fully dawned upon mankind. For a century the Christian world had struggled with the intolerant spirit of the Middle Ages. Much, indeed, had been accomplished, but the evolution was slow, and another century must elapse before one could stand in the broad daylight of religious liberty. These Dissenters, or Nonconformists, as they were often called, were very numerous during the reign of James I. James was a narrow-minded pedant, and probably without any very deep religious convictions. Bred in the Presbyterian faith, he despised Presbyterianism because incompatible with his ideas of monarchy. Of the Puritans he said, "I will make them conform, or I will harry them out of the land." They refused to conform, and the cruel monarch did the latter he harried them out of the land.
Source: " History of the United States of America ," by Henry William Elson, The MacMillan Company, New York, 1904. Chapter IV, page 98. Transcribed by Kathy Leigh.

10. Sail1620 - Explore The 17th Century Lives Of The Mayflower Pilgrims Through Hist
Society, historical, factual, and genealogical information about the Pilgrim Fathers.
http://www.sail1620.org
This site will work and look better in a browser that supports web standards , but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device, including PDAs.
Welcome to the Sail1620.org, home of the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania . The Society consists of descendants of the Pilgrims, the 102 English passengers who came to New England from Holland and England aboard the ship Mayflower in 1620.
Sail1620.org is designed to be a fun as well as educational road map to this corner of 17th century history. Within the pages of this website we have tried to provided you with useful information, not just about our state society, but also a clear and factual reference to the lives and history of the Pilgrim Forefathers, the Plymouth Colony, and their ship the Mayflower. "Here is a stone which the feet of a few outcasts pressed for an instant; and
the stone becomes famous; it is
treasured by a great nation; its

11. Britannia.com: Hidden London By Jan Collie
The Pilgrim Fathers 1620. The story of the Mayflower and the small band of religiousdissidents who boarded her in the hope of finding freedom in the New World
http://www.britannia.com/hiddenlondon/pilgrim_fathers.html
Shakespeare's London Dickens' London The American Connection Churches with Character ... Wandering Wheels
The Pilgrim Fathers
The story of the Mayflower and the small band of religious dissidents who boarded her in the hope of finding freedom in the New World must be one of the best-known tales in history.
Determined to win the right to worship according to their own consciences, 101 men, women and children set out from Plymouth, England on a perilous journey across the Atlantic Ocean. Their intended destination was the British colony of Virginia but the Mayflower was blown around 500 miles off course and they finally took shelter in a natural harbour at what later became Provincetown, Massachusetts.
After exploring the area, the travellers disembarked near the head of Cape Cod on December 21, 1620 but arguments had broken out between them over how the colony they intended to found should be governed. This led to the formulation of a binding agreement known as the Mayflower Compact which was effectively the first constitution to be written in America.
Now a unified group, the passengers of the

12. New England Colonies
The story of the New England colonies. Part of an etext on the history of the United States. Introduction to Colonization of New England. Pilgrim Fathers Massachusetts Bay Connecticut Introduction to Colonization of New England. Pilgrim Fathers Massachusetts Bay
http://www.foundingfathers.info/us-history/New-England
Founding Fathers Home Page US History E-Text New England
CHAPTER V Colonization
New England
Introduction to Colonization of New England
Pilgrim Fathers
Massachusetts Bay Connecticut
Rhode Island and Providence
... New Hampshire
Also see: New England Affairs
When North America was first settled by the English race the blessings of religious freedom had not yet fully dawned upon mankind. For a century the Christian world had struggled with the intolerant spirit of the Middle Ages. Much, indeed, had been accomplished, but the evolution was slow, and another century must elapse before one could stand in the broad daylight of religious liberty. These Dissenters, or Nonconformists, as they were often called, were very numerous during the reign of James I. James was a narrow-minded pedant, and probably without any very deep religious convictions. Bred in the Presbyterian faith, he despised Presbyterianism because incompatible with his ideas of monarchy. Of the Puritans he said, "I will make them conform, or I will harry them out of the land." They refused to conform, and the cruel monarch did the latter he harried them out of the land.
Source: " History of the United States of America ," by Henry William Elson, The MacMillan Company, New York, 1904. Chapter IV, page 98. Transcribed by Kathy Leigh.

13. Leiden Promotie VVV/ Verhalen Van.... Pilgrim Fathers
Pilgrim Fathers oen de Pilgrims vanuit Engeland naar Holland vluchtten om vervolgingte ontlopen, waren ze èèn van de vele groepen die veiligheid vonden in
http://www.leidenpromotie.nl/destad/verhalen/pilgrim/csvp010.htm
Pilgrim Fathers
de Leidse lakenindustrie
had veel te danken aan de komst van bijvoorbeeld Franse en Vlaamse wevers.
De Pilgrims leidden van 1609 tot 1620 een rustig leven in Leiden. Ze hielden hun kerkdiensten in een kapel van de universiteit. William Bradford was lid van het wolgilde en dominee John Robinson woonde op de plek waar later het Jean Pesijnhofje werd gebouwd. Robinson bleef achter in Leiden, stierf en werd begraven in de Pieterskerk in 1625. In de Pieterskerkchoorsteeg is nog steeds het huis te vinden waar William Brewster met zijn Pilgrim Press
Momenteel is ter nagedachtenis van het verblijf van de Pilgrim Fathers in de Beschuitsteeg het Leiden American Pilgrim Museum ingericht.

14. PILGRIM FATHERS-COLONIZATION--NEW ENGLAND
THE Pilgrim Fathers. The Separatists1were less numerous by far than other classes of Nonconformists, yet they The "Pilgrim Fathers" with their wives and children, as borne by the
http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/colonial/book/chap5_1.html
THE PILGRIM FATHERS The Separatists were less numerous by far than other classes of Nonconformists, yet they formed the advance guard of the great Puritan exodus from the mother country to the shores of New England. The town of Scrooby in Nottinghamshire was the center of a scattered congregation of Separatists whose minister was John Robinson and whose ruling elder was William Brewster, the village postmaster. After enduring many persecutions this little band of Christians, who now became "Pilgrims," escaped with difficulty from their native land to Amsterdam, Holland, whence a year later they removed to Leyden. Here they dwelt for eleven years, exiles for conscience’ sake, earning their bread by the labor of their hands. But the Pilgrims felt that Holland was not their home; they could not endure the thought of giving up their language and customs for those of the Dutch, nor were they willing to return to their native England, where religious persecution had not abated. They had heard of the colony of Virginia, and their thoughts were directed to the wilderness of the New World. Through the friendship and aid of Sir Edwin Sandys, and others, they secured a little money and purchased a little vessel, the Speedwell , hired another, the Mayflower , and determined to cross the wide waters to America, where they might worship God in their own way and still be Englishmen. Having secured a grant from the Virginia Company to settle in the Hudson Valley, and a promise from the king that he would not interfere with them, and having mortgaged themselves to a company of London merchants, they set forth with brave hearts to encounter the unknown perils of the sea and of the wilderness. The

15. Plymouth And The Pilgrim Fathers
Plymouth And The Pilgrim Fathers. Perhaps the most well known of these was thetrip undertaken by the Pilgrim Fathers in the small ship, Mayflower .
http://www.zephryus.demon.co.uk/education/geog/swengland/pilg.html
P lymouth A nd T he P ilgrim F athers. The city of Plymouth, just a 15 minute ferry crossing from Torpoint, is the starting point of many famous sea voyages. Perhaps the most well known of these was the trip undertaken by the Pilgrim Fathers in the small ship, Mayflower Most North Americans and British have heard of the voyage of the Mayflower. The story concerns the flight from Britain of a small group of deeply religious citizens, persecuted at home, and the founding of a new nation, the United States of America. The origins of the voyage go back to the 1580's when Britain was ruled by Elizabeth I. It was a time when trade with other countries was expanding, a new social class, the merchant adventurer, was becoming strongly established, and the church was held in high regard. Britain was officially a protestant country with it's own church, the Church of England. This had been created by Elizabeth's father, Henry VIII, after a series of arguements with the Pope. In the end, Henry had cut all links to the Pope and the Roman Catholic faith, dissolved the monastries and made himself head of the new church. He had, incidently, made a considerable financial gain by taking posession all the wealth, lands and buildings of the Roman Catholic church within the realm. Not surprisingly, the Roman Catholics were less than happy with the current state of religious practice. They were forbidden to practice their own religion, were persecuted and ran a real risk of loosing not just their posessions but their lives too if they were caught.

16. Pilgrims - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Pilgrims. (Redirected from Pilgrim Fathers). The Pilgrims were agroup of English religious separatists who sailed from Europe to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrim_Fathers
Pilgrims
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from Pilgrim Fathers The Pilgrims were a group of English religious separatists who sailed from Europe to North America in the early 17th century , in search of a home where they could freely practice their religion and live according to their own laws. The various members of the group had broken away from the Church of England , feeling that the Church had not completed the task begun by the Reformation . Under the guidance of the Reverends William Brewster and Richard Clifton , a portion of the group left their home in Scrooby, England and sailed to Amsterdam to escape religious persecution at the hands of their countrymen. They settled in Leiden for 12 years, but by a poor economy and concern over the Dutch influence on their community convinced many of them to move on, this time to the New World. Fewer than half of the Congregation's members chose to leave the Netherlands , sailing aboard the Speedwell to Southampton, England , where they joined a larger group of separatists and boarded the Mayflower to cross the Atlantic . They departed on September 6th , with 102 people aboard, their destination a section of land in the area called Northern Virginia granted by one of the Brewster family friends in the London Company . This grant would have placed them near the Hudson River Forced off course by typical North Atlantic weather, the

17. The Pilgrim Fathers Passenger List And Geneology
Here you will find a full list of the Pilgrim Fathers and the families that wereon board The Mayflower. Welcome to the section about the Pilgrim Fathers.
http://www.mayflowersteps.co.uk/pilgrim_index.html
The Pilgrim fathers, their families and the ties that bind them. Page updated 15 May 04
Home
Mayflower The Pilgrim Fathers Plymouth Souvenir Shop ... About Us Get a beautiful tile coaster of the Compact Signing from the Mayflower Steps Souvenir shop
click here to see larger
Tracing your family history? Get
The Genealogist's Internet

Welcome to the section about the Pilgrim Fathers. You'll find out about the people who were the Pilgrim Fathers and their families. You'll also find some genealogy details and links so you can find out if you were related to them. A surprising number of people can follow their family history back to a Pilgrim Father and the Mayflower. Perhaps you are one of them? If you really want to live the Mayflower experience, there is a book, the Diary of Remember Patience Whipple . It's a diary written by a fictional character set in the real history of the Mayflower. If you prefer fact rather than fiction, this true narrative recounts the lives and adventures of the people who made the voyage: The Voyage That Changed the World: The "Mayflower" and the United States of America
Or there is the definitive book by Rev. Dr Harold Kirk-Smith

18. The Passenger List Of The Mayflower, The Pilgrim Fathers, Their Families And The
A full list of the Pilgrim Fathers and other passengers whowere on board the Mayflower. Last updated 1 May 04.
http://www.mayflowersteps.co.uk/pilgrim/who.html
A full list of the Pilgrim Fathers and other passengers who were on board the Mayflower. Last updated 1 May 04
Home
Mayflower The Pilgrim Fathers Plymouth Souvenir Shop About Us Get souvenirs and gifts of Plymouth from the Mayflower Steps Souvenir Shop There is a book that may prove to be of interest. William Mullins: Pilgrim Father and His House in West Street, Dorking. Get a beautiful tile coaster of the Compact Signing from the Mayflower Steps Souvenir shop
click here to see larger

Browse the Roster of the Mayflower and find out birth, marriage
and death details of each, where known...
you might like to visit a site that identifies flawed Mayflower geneology research. It's here B C D ... U
Alden, John Born about 1599. Died at Duxbury, 12 September, 1687. He married, at Plymouth, before 1624, Priscilla Mullins. Ten children. Numerous descendants.
Allerton, Isaac Was born about 1586. He died at New Haven, Conn., before 22 February 1659. He married, first, at Leiden, 4 November 1611. He married, second, at Plymouth, between July, 1623, and 1 June, 1627, Fear Brewster, who died at presumably at Plymouth in 1634. He married, third, before 1644, Joanna Swinnerton, who survived him.
Allerton, Mary (Norris), wife

19. Pilgrim Fathers
You are here Home Council Services Economic Development and Tourism PilgrimFathers. Banner Logo. Back to Economic Development and Tourism Pilgrim Fathers.
http://www.bassetlaw.gov.uk/index/council-services-c1/economic-development-and-t
You are here Home Council Services Economic Development and Tourism > Pilgrim Fathers About Bassetlaw A Place to Visit A Place to Live A Place to Work ... Back to Economic Development and Tourism Pilgrim Fathers The Pilgrim Fathers Story Begins
Mid 18th century engraving of Scrooby
A Terrible Journey William Brewster, his wife Mary and their nine year old son Love, reached North America in November 1620 and played a major part in founding the new society.
Showing Cramped Conditions on board the Mayflower
The Mayflower at anchor at Cape Cod.
They endured 30 foot waves and the gales were so severe that the ship began to leak, but luckily the Pilgrims had tools which they used to repair the damage. On 9th November 1620, just as they were about to give up hope, land was spotted - Cape Cod on the east coast of North America - over 3,000 miles from the start of their journey in Bassetlaw, North Nottinghamshire. A New Life - 3,000 Miles From Bassetlaw
The Burial Hill, Plymouth, Massachusetts. William Brewster enjoyed a senior position as the ruling Elder in the new society until his death on 10th April 1644 aged 78. When the colony became established his daughters crossed the Atlantic to join him and raised their own families. Thanksgiving Day Pilgrim Facts
  • In the Museum and at the Public Library in Worksop, North Nottinghamshire, there is an exhibition which is dedicated to "The Pilgrim Fathers' Story".

20. 60. The Pilgrim Fathers By John Pierpont. Stedman, Edmund Clarence, Ed. 1900. An
60. The Pilgrim Fathers by John Pierpont. Stedman, Edmund Clarence, ed. 1900. AnAmerican Anthology, 17871900. 1900. 60. The Pilgrim Fathers. By John Pierpont.
http://www.bartleby.com/248/60.html
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