The Pilgrim Fathers
The Separatists1 were less numerous by far than other classes of
Nonconformists, yet they formed the advance guard of the great Puritan
exodus from England 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 became known as "Pilgrims," escaped with difficulty from their
native land to Amsterdam, Holland. They moved a year later to Leyden.
They remained for eleven years.
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 they began to plan
how to go to the New World.
Through the friendship and aid of Sir Edwin Sandys, they secured
a little money and purchased a small sailing ship, the Speedwell,
hired another, the Mayflower.
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 (endentured) themselves to a company
of London merchants for 7 years to repay the loan, they left for
the unknown perils of the Atlantic Ocean and of the wilderness of
North America.
The Speedwell proved unfit for the sea.
They reëmbarked from Plymouth, England, in the Mayflower alone.
Their minister Robinson had remained in Leyden. Brewster was the
leader of the group.
He and John Carver were well advanced in years, but most of the
company were young.
William Bradford was thirty and Edward Winslow was twenty-five.
Before leaving Plymouth they were joined by Miles Standish, a soldier
of thirty-six, who was in sympathy with the movement though not
a member of the congregation.
The "Pilgrim Fathers" with their wives and children, as borne by
the Mayflower, numbered one hundred and two; one died on the voyage
and one was born.
After a perilous voyage of many weeks they anchored off the coast
of New England, far from the point at which they had aimed, and
here they were obliged to remain.
Being north of the bounds of the company that had granted them a
patent, they occupied a country to which they had no legal right.
Before landing they drew up a compact for the government of the
colony and chose John Carver governor for the first year. This compact,
one of the "first written constitutions" was an agreement by which
they pledged themselves "solemnly and mutually, in the presence
of God and of one another, " to form a body politic, to frame such
laws as they might need, to which they promised "all due submission
and obedience."
The compact was signed by all the adult males, forty-one in number,
on the 11th of November, the day on which the Mayflower entered
Cape Cod harbor.
An exploring party went ashore, and they found the country bleak
and uninviting in the extreme. The snow was half a foot deep, and
the fierce wind blew the spray of the sea upon them where it froze
until their "clothes looked like coats of iron."
But the Pilgrims had not sought ease and comfort; they expected
hardships and discouragements. They chose Plymouth harbor as a landing
place, and on December 16, one hundred and two days after leaving
Plymouth, England, they made a landing in the face of a wintry storm,
on a barren rock since known as Plymouth Rock. Next they "fell vpon
their knees and blessed ye God of heaven, who had brought them ouer
ye vast and furious ocean."
In a few days the men were busily engaged in building cabins, returning
each night to the ship.
Before the coming of spring more than forty of them, including the
wives of Bradford, Winslow, and Standish, died.
And yet when the Mayflower sailed for England in the early spring,
not one of the survivors returned with her, and it is a singular
face that nearly all who survived that dreadful winter at Plymouth
lived to a good old age.
Among those who died the first year was Governor Carver, and William
Bradford, the historian of the colony, was chosen to fill the office,
and he held the position for thirty-one years.