History Heritage Pilgrim - Frisby
Transcription
History Heritage Pilgrim - Frisby
PILGRIMS The foundation of the colony of New Plymouth founded in the new world by the Pilgrims was one of the major events in the early history of the American colonies. “The Pilgrims were a group of people 'in ye North parts' of England, where 'many became enlightened by ye word of God, and had their ignorance and sins discovered unto them, and begane by his grace to reforme their lives.' For this they were scoffed and scorned 'by ye prophane multitude.” Among the early Pilgrims was a group of separatists, also known as Brownists, who were members of a radical religious movement that broke or separated from the new Protestant Church of England during the reign of Elizabeth I, Queen of England in the16th and 17th centuries. The only remaining wing of the original Scrooby Manor House. William Brewster resided here and this is the place where the Pilgrims first met in secret following their separation from the Church of England. Photo by Eugene A. Fortine In 1606, after much persecution, William Brewster led a group of separatists to Leiden (Leyden), The Netherlands, (Holland) to escape religious persecution in England. After living in Leiden for ten to twelve years, some members of the group voted to immigrate to America. The voyage was financed by a group of London investors who were promised produce from America during their first six years in exchange for their assistance. The congregation of John Robinson traveled by barge from Leiden on the river Vliet to Delft Haven where they boarded the hired ship called the Speedwell to take them from Delft Haven, the Netherlands, (Holland) to Southampton, England, to meet up with the Mayflower. The two ships planned to sail together to Northern Virginia. The Speedwell departed Delfthaven on July 22, and arrived at Southampton, where they found the Mayflower waiting for them. The Speedwell had been leaking on her voyage from the Netherlands to England, though, so they spent the next week patching her up. The Mayflower was hired in London, and sailed from London to Southampton in July 1620 to begin loading food and supplies for the voyage-much of which was purchased at Southhampton. Speedwell Passenger List 1620 ALLERTON Isaac (34), tailor Mary [Norris] (32), wife FLETCHER Moses (c.38), blacksmith FULLER TILLEY Edward (46), occupation unknown Agnes/Alice/Ann_____(?), wife Bartholmew (8), son Edward (c. 25), occupation unknown Remember (6), daughter Ann _____(?), wife John (49), silk-worker Samuel, Jr. (5), son Joan (Hurst) Rogers, wife FULLER Mary (4), daughter BLOSSOM Dr. Thomas F. (?) BRADFORD William (31), fustian-maker Dorothy [May] (c.23), wife BREWSTER William (54), teacher/printer Mary _____(?), wife John (8), son Love (9), son Wrestling (6), son BROWNE Peter (20), occupation unknown FULLER Dr. Samuel (35), physician GOODMAN John (25), linen-weaver HOLBECK William (?), servant HOOKE John (13-14), servant HOWLAND John (28), servant MARGESON Edward (?), occupation unknown MINTER Desire (20), with Carvers CARVER Catherine [White-Leggatt] (?), wife PRIEST CHILTON RIGDALE Digory (40), hatter James (57), tailor John (?), occupation unknown Susanna [Furner] (?), wife Alice _____(?), wife Mary (15), daughter CLARKE Richard (?), hired seaman COOKE Francis (43), wool-comber CRACKSTON John (35), occupation unknown John, Jr. (?), son CUSHMAN Mary (?), wife DELANO Philip (18) EATON Francis (25), carpenter Sarah _____(?), wife RING William (?), occupation unknown ROGERS Thomas (30+), camlet merchant Joseph (12), son SOULE George (21), servant STANDISH Myles (36), military leader Rose_____(?), wife STORY Elias (42), hired seaman THOMSON Edward (?), servant TILLEY Elizabeth (14), daughter TINKER Thomas (39), wood-sawyer Mrs, Tinker [?] (?), wife Son Tinker (?) TURNER John (39), merchant Elder son Turner (?) Younger son Turner (?) WHITE William (28), wood-carver Susanna [Fuller] (26), wife Resolved (5), son WILDER Roger (?), servant WILLIAMS Thomas (?), occupation unknown WINSLOW Edward (25), printer Elizabeth [Barker] (23), wife The following is a letter written by John Robinson and given to the Pilgrims as they set sail from Southampton. The letters of Robinson to the colony were very precious to the Pilgrims, as of an absent father to this flock, fraught with wise counsels, and with feelings of an affectionate heart. He always looked upon them as his people, and they looked to him as their Pastor; for to the day of his death neither he nor they had abandoned the hope of being again united. (Spelling and grammar is unchanged and is as it appears in the original document) CERETAINE VSEFVL ADVERTISEMENTS SENT in a letter written by a descreete friend vnto the Planters in New England, at their first setting saile from Southhampton, who earnestly desireth the prosperitie of that their new Plantation * * * Loving and Christian friends, I doe heartily and in the Lord salute you all, as being they with whom I am present in my best affection, and most earnest longings after you, though I be constrained for a while to be bodily absent from you, I say constrained, god knowing how willingly and much rather that otherwise I would haue borne m part with you in this first brunt, were I not by strong necessitie held backe for the present. Make account of me in the meane while, as of a man duided in my selfe with great paine, and as (naturall bonds set aside) hauing my better part with you. And though I doubt not but in our godly wisedomes you both foresee and resolue vpon that which concerneth your present state and condition both seuerally and ioyntly, yet haue I thought but my dutie to adde some further spurre of prouocation vnto them who run already, if not because you need it, yet because I owe it in loue and dutie. And first, as we are daily to renew our repentance with our God, speciall for our sinnes knowne, and generall for our vnknown trespasses, so doth the Lord call vs in a singular manner vpon occasions of such difficultie and danger as lieth vpon you, to a both more narrow search and carefull reformation of our wayes in his sight, lest he calling to remembrance our sinnes forgotten by vs or vnrepented of, take aduantage against vs, and in iudgement leaue vs for the same to be swallowed vp in one danger or other; whereas on the contrary sin being taken away by earnest repentance and the pardon thereof from the lord, sealed vp vnto a mans conscience by his Spirit, great shall be his securitie and peace in all dangers, sweete his comforts in all distresses, with happy deliuerance from all euill, whether in life or in death. Now next after this heauenly peace with God and our owne consciences, we are carefully to prouide for peace with all men what in vs lieth, especially with our associates, and for that end watchfulness must be had, that we neither at all in our selues do glue, no nor easily take offence being giuen by others. Woe be vnto the world for offences, for though it be necessary (considering the malice of Satan and mans corruption) that offences come, yet woe vnto the man or woman either by whom the offence cometh, saith Christ, Math. 18.7. And if offences in the vnseasonable vse of things in themselues indifferent, be more to be feared than death itselfe, as the Apostle teacheth, 1. Cor. 9. 15 how much more in things simply euill, in which neither honour of God nor loue of man is thought worthy to be regarded. Neither yet is it sufficient that we keep our selues by the grace of God from giuing offence, except withal we be armed against the taking of them when they are giuen by others. For how vnperfect and lame is the worke of grace in that person, who wants charitie to couer a multitude of offences, as the Scriptures speake. Neither are you to be exhorted to this grace onely vpon the common grounds of Christianitie, which are, that persons ready to take offence, either want charite to cover offences, or wisedome duly to weigh humane frailtie; or lastly are grosse, though close hypocrites, as Christ our Lord teacheth, Math. 7. 1, 2, 3. as indeed in mine owne experience, few or none haue beene found which sooner giue offence, that such as easily take it; neither haue they euer nourished in themselues that touchey humour. But besides these, there are diuer spetiall motiues prouoking you aboue others to great care and conscience this way: As first, you are many of you strangers, as to the persons, so to the infirmities one of another, and so stand in neede of more watchfulnesse this way, lest when such things fall out in men and women as you suspected not, you be inordinately affected with them; which doth require at your hands much wisedome and charitie for the couering and preuenting of incident offences that way. And lastly your intended course of ciuill communitie wil minister continuall occasion of offence, and will be as fuell for that fire, except you diligently quench it with brotherly forbearance. And if taking of offence causelessly or easily at mens doings be so carefully to be auoided, how much more heed is to be taken that we take not offence at God himselfe, which yet we certainly do so oft as we do murrmure at his prouidence in our crosses, or beare impatiently such afflictions as wherewith he pleaseth to visit vu. Store we vp therefore patience against the euill day, withour which we take offence at the Lord himselfe in his holy and iust works. A fourth thing there is carefully to be prouided for, to wit, that with your common employments you ioyne common affections truly bent vpon the general good, auoiding as a deadly plague of your both common and speciall comfort all retirednesse of minde for proper aduantage, and all singularly affected any maner of way; let euery man represse in himselfe and the whole bodie in each person, as so many rebel against the common good, all priuate respects of mens selues, not sorting with the generall conueniencie. And as men are carefull not to haue a new house shaken with any violence before it be well settled and the parts firmly knit: so be you, I beseech you brethren, much more carefull, that the house of God which you are and are to be, be not shaken with vnnessary nouelitis or other oppositions at the first settling thereof. Lastly, whereas you are to become a body politik, using amongst your selues ciuill gouernment, and are not furnished with any person of speciall eminencie aboue the rest, to be chosen by you into office of gouernment: Let your wisedome and godlinesse appeare, not onely in chusing such persons as do entirely loue, and will diligently promote the common good, but also in yielding vnto them all due honour and obedience in their lawfull administrations, no beholding in them the ordinarinesse of their persons, but God’s ordinance for your good; nor being like vnto the foolish multitude, who more honour the gay coate, that either the virtuous mind of the man, or glorious ordinance of the Lord. But you know better things, and that the image of the Lords power and authoritie which the magistrate beareth, is honorable, in how meane persons soeuer. And this dutie you both may the more willingly, and ought the mor conscionably to performe, because you are at least for the present to haue onely them for you ordinary gouernours, which your selues shall make choise of for that worke. Sundrie other things of importance I could put you in mind of, and of those before mentioned in more words, but I will not so far wrong your godly minds, as to think you heedlesse of these things, there being also diuers among you so well able to admonish both themselues and others of what concerneth them. These few things therefore, and the same in few words I do earnestly commend vnto your care and conscience, ioyning therewith my daily incessant prayers vnto the Lord, that he who hath made the heauens and the earth, the sea and all riuers of waters, and whose prouidence is ouer all his workes, especially ouer all his deare children for good, would so guide and guard you in your wayes, as inwardly by his Spirit, so outwardly by the hand of his power, as that both you and we also, for and with you, may haue after matter of praising his Name all the days of your and our liues. Fare you well in him in whom you trust, and in whom I rest. An vnfained, well-willer of your happie successe in this hopefull voyage, I. R. The Pilgrims never did obtain a valid charter from the King. Without financial assistance from others, it would be impossible to undertake such a move. For this reason, the Pilgrims were compelled to get together with those who had financial resources. Thus it was that they ended up making a compact with Thomas Weston and a group of “merchant adventurers” who financed the expedition in return for anticipated profit that was to be provided by the labor of the colony in the new world. On August 5, the two ships finally set sail for America. But the Speedwell began leaking again, so they pulled into the town of Dartmouth for repairs, arriving there about August 12. The Speedwell was patched up again, and the two ships again set sail for America, about August 21. After the two ships had sailed about 300 miles out to sea, the Speedwell again began to leak. Frustrated with the enormous amount of time lost, and their inability to fix the Speedwell so that it could be sea-worthy, they returned to Plymouth, England, and made the decision to leave the Speedwell behind. The Mayflower would go to America alone. The cargo on the Speedwell was transferred over to the Mayflower, some of the passengers were so tired and disappointed with all the problems that they quit and went home. Others crammed themselves onto the now very crowded Mayflower. The Speedwell in the Port of Dartmouth Finally, on September 16, 1620, these separatists were part of a group numbering 102 men, women and children who left Plymouth, England, for America on the Mayflower. Other passengers were English families or individuals who were hoping to better their life situations, or were seeking financial gain. These two general groups have sometimes been referred to as the “saints” and “strangers”. By the time the Pilgrims had left England, they had already been living onboard the ships for nearly a month and a half. Mayflower Passenger List John Alden John Carver Ellen More Edward Tilley Isaac Allerton Katherine (White) Carver John Goodman Richard Gardinar Jasper More Ann (Cooper) Tilley Mary (Norris) Allerton James Chilton William Holbeck Richard More John Tilley Bartholomew Allerton Mrs. Chilton John Hooke Mary More Joan (Hurst) Tilley Remember Allerton Mary Chilton Stephen Hopkins William Mullins Elizabeth Tilley Mary Allerton Richard Clarke Elizabeth (Fisher) Hopkins Mrs. Alice Mullins Thomas Tinker, wife, and son John Allerton Francis Cooke Constance Hopkins Priscilla Mullins William Trevore John Billington John Cooke Giles Hopkins Joseph Mullins John Turner, and two sons Eleanor Billington Humility Cooper Damaris Hopkins Degory Priest Richard Warren John Billington John Crackston Oceanus Hopkins Solomon Prower William White Francis Billington John Crackston John Howland John Rigsdale Mrs. Susanna White William Bradford Edward Doty John Langmore Alice Rigsdale Resolved White Dorothy (May) Bradford Francis Eaton William Latham Thomas Rogers Roger Wilder William Brewster Mrs. Sarah Eaton Edward Leister Joseph Rogers Thomas Williams Mrs. Mary Brewster Samuel Eaton Edmund Margesson Henry Samson Edward Winslow Love Brewster Thomas English Christopher Martin George Soule Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow Wrestling Brewster Moses Fletcher Mary (Prower) Martin Myles Standish Gilbert Winslow Richard Britteridge Edward Fuller Desire Minter Mrs. Rose Standish Peter Browne Mrs. Fuller Elias Story "Mr. Ely" William Button Samuel Fuller Edward Thompson Dorothy, Carver's maidservant Robert Carter Samuel Fuller The voyage itself across the Atlantic Ocean took 66 days. The first half of the voyage went fairly smoothly, the only major problem was sea-sickness. But by October, they began encountering a number of Atlantic storms that made the voyage treacherous. Several times, the wind was so strong they had to just drift where the weather took them, it was not safe to use the ship’s sails. It being so late in the year, the passengers found it almost impossible to keep warm and dry. The pounding of heavy seas opened up many seams in the deck and superstructure, letting cascades of icy water down upon the frightened passengers curled up on their narrow bunks below, many of whom were already suffering from seasickness. William Butten, a youth and servant to Samuel Fuller was the only passenger who died on the voyage. After a main beam broke in the storm, the skipper himself became seriously concerned, and there was much discussion among the officers about turning back. But the beam was repaired with a great iron screw a passenger had brought with him from Holland, the ship pronounced safe by the captain, although leaky in her upper works, and the voyage continued. On November 11, November 21 (old style calendar), the Mayflower dropped anchor in the sheltered harbor off the site of present-day Provincetown, Massachusetts. On December 21, after an exploratory voyage along Cape Cod, the Pilgrims landed and disembarked from the Mayflower near the head of the cape and founded Plymouth Colony. Today, people in New England celebrate December 21 as Forefathers’ Day. The feelings of the Pilgrims on this occasion are best expressed by William Bradford: “Being thus arrived in a good harbor and brought safe to land, they fell upon their knees and blessed ye God of Heaven, who had brought them over ye vast and furious ocean, and delivered them from all ye periles and miseries therof, againe to set their feete on ye firme and stable earth, their proper elemente…” The Pilgrims had originally intended to go to Virginia, where they would have been under the jurisdiction of the London Company, one of two English companies that had been chartered to colonize North America. But they were blown off course and had no grant to settle in the region controlled by the Plymouth Company, the other English company. Thus the Pilgrims drew up the Mayflower Compact which served as a precursor to constitutional law in America. This was the first agreement that formed a government by the consent of the governed. The Mayflower Compact was completed and signed on the ship, Mayflower (old May Floure) which was anchored off the coast of Massachusetts. The compact gave the settlers the power to frame and enact laws for the general good of the planned settlement. All adult male passengers on the ship were required to sign it. Most of the Pilgrims were members of the Separatist congregation that had split from the Church of England. However, some were not, and these people sought independence from the separatists. To prevent this, Separatist leaders wrote the compact, which was modeled after the covenant that had established their Separatist faith. Under this informal agreement or covenant, government was based on consent of the governed, an important precedent for the development of American democracy. All colonists had to obey the laws that were enacted. This compact established majority rule, which remained a primary principle of the government in Plymouth Colony until Massachusetts Bay Colony absorbed the colony in 1691. John Carver was selected as governor; he was succeeded in 1621 by William Bradford. THE MAYFLOWER COMPACT November 11, 1620 (This was November 21, old style calendar) In the name of God, Amen. We, whose names are underwritten, the Loyal Subjects of our dread Sovereign Lord, King James, by the Grace of God, of great Britaine, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c. Having undertaken for the Glory of God, and Advancement of the Christian Faith, and the Honour of our King and Country, a Voyage to plant the first colony in the Northerne Parts of Virginia; doe, by these Presents, solemnly and mutually in the Presence of God and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civill Body Politick, for our better Ordering and Preservation, and Furtherance of the ends aforesaid; and by Virtue hereof do enact, constitute, and frame, such just and equall Laws, Ordinances, Acts, Constitutions, and Offices, from time to time, as shall be tho ught most meete and convenient for the Generall Good of the Colonie; unto which we promise all due Submission and Obedience. In Witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names at Cape Cod the eleventh of November, in the Raigne of our Sovereigne Lord, King James of England, France, and Ireland, the eighteenth, and of Scotland, the fiftie-fourth, Anno. Dpomini, 1620. Mr. John Carver Mr. William Bradford Mr. Edward Winslow Mr. William Brewster Miles Standish John Alden Isaac Allerton John Turner Francis Eaton James Chilton James Craxton John Billiington Joses Fletcher John Goodman Mr. Samuel Fuller Mr. Christopher Martin Mr. William Mullins Mr. William White Mr. Richard Warren John Howland Edward Liester Mr. Stephen Hopkins Digery Priest Gilbert Winslow Edmund Margesson Thomas Williams Peter Brown Richard Bitteridge Geoge Soule Edward Tilley John Tilley Francis Cooke Thomas Rogers Thomas Tinker John Ridgate Edward Fuller Richard Clark Richard Gardiner Mr. John Allerton Thomas English Edward Doten Although the Leiden congregation had sent its strongest members with various skills for establishing the new colony, nearly half of the passengers died the first winter from an epidemic of “great sickness.” They arrived in the fall when everything was brown and no fresh fruits or vegetables were available. They had lived on salted or dried meat for months. It was after a year or two that they finally discovered that the illness was scurvy and caused by the lack of fresh foods. That first winter was a period of fatigue, anxiety, sickness, sadness and death. Anyone who arrived in Plymouth on the Mayflower and survived the initial hardships is now considered a Pilgrim with no distinction being made on the basis of their original purposes for making the voyage. Originally, there were saints and strangers. Saints were the Pilgrims and strangers were those who came for other reasons than religion. The Pilgrim sarcophagus containing the remains of many of the Pilgrims who died the first winter sits high on Cole's Hill overlooking Plymouth Harbor. This was the site of the first burial ground. Photos were taken by Laura Shull of Arkansas Mayflower Society. The Sarchophagus Monument erected to the memory of those who perished the first winter holds the remains gathered over the years either from the rainstorm or by excavation. Placed inside this sarcophagus in a plain pine box sealed inside a waterproof box are those remains. This monument was erected by the General Society of Mayflower Descendants in 1920. Their names, a quote from the diary of Wm. Bradford and inscription about how the original bodies may have been buried marks this important and impressive monument. The names of John and Joan Tilley and John’s brother Edward may be engraved on the tomb. The inscription on the Sarcophagus reads: Here under cover of darkness the fast dwindling company laid their dead, leveling the earth above them lest the Indians should learn how many were their graves. Reader, history records no nobler venture for faith and freedom than that of this pilgrim band. In weariness and painfulness in watchings often in hunger and cold, they laid the foundations of a state wherein every man through countless ages should have liberty to worship God in his own way. May their example inspire thee to do thy part in perpetuating and spreading the lofty ideals of our Republic throughout the world. All the while the Pilgrim company had been overcome with sickness, growing weaker and weaker, “ye Indeans came skulking about them,” causing great concern. One day, to their amazement, a tall powerful warrior emerged from the woods, crossed the clearing, and came striding down the street toward the Common House. When the dumbfounded Pilgrims ran out to interceop him, he greeted them in English, “Welcome.” His name was Samoset. He told them that four years previously a devasting plague had swept the forests of New England. The Patuxet tribe, a large and formidable one in its day, had occupied the area where the Pilgrims had now settled, but had been completely wiped out except for one person, a friend of his named Squanto. Samoset later introduced Squanto to the Pilgrims. His extraordinary career had taken him to England with a white exploring party in 1605 where he had learned to speak English. He had returned with Captain John Smith in 1614, only to be kidnapped away a short time later by a ship which put in at Patuxet (Plymouth) harbor and lured a number of Indians on board under the pretext of trade, then seized and bound them and sailed for Spain, where they were sold on the slave market. Squanto managed to get away and made his way to London, where he lived for several years before sailing again to America with an exploring party. When he returned to Plymouth, just six months before the arrival of the Mayflower, he discovered that the plague had exterminated all of his people – every man, woman, and child; all of his family and friends. All that remained was abandoned cornfields, white skulls and bleached bones. By this strange chain of fate, Squanto had been spared to become the last of the Patuxet. Upon hearing Squanto’s story, the Pilgrims considered it to be a special providence of God in “opening up a way for them,” since they did not now have to contend with the Patuxet tribe for the possession of the ground. Squanto quickly embraced the Pilgrim faith, came to live with them, and was a faithful friend until the day he died. Without Squanto’s help, it is doubtful that the struggling Pilgrim community could have survived. The seed that they had brought with them from England did poorly, but Squanto taught them how to plant corn and catch fish. Even then, the gaunt specter of starvation haunted them day and night for years. The relations with the Indians were almost too successful. Indian warriors soon began streaming into the Pilgrim village, expecting to be wined and dined. Braves would drop in at all hours of the day and night, often with their wives and children, and all had insatiable thirsts and appetites. The Pilgrims hardly had enough provisions for themselves, but they were also hesitant to offend the Indians. With Squanto as guide, the Pilgrims sent two men to the Massasoit chief to see if they could put a stop to this “disorderly coming.” After being presented with a fancy red coat as a gift, the chief agreed to their request. The poor Pilgrims had eaten nothing all day and looked hopefully about them for supper. None was offered. They went to bed hungry, being invited to share the royal couch with the chief and his squaw. It was hard and uncomfortable, and two big braves came in later and lay down on top of them. The next morning the chief went fishing and returned about noon with two bass, which were thrown into a pot and boiled. After sharing this “feast” with forty famished braves, the Pilgrims felt hungrier than before. Being faint and dizzy from fatigue, hunger, and lack of sleep, and fearing that they may not make it home, they sent a runner ahead of them with instructions to bring back food from Plymouth and meet them along the way. The Wampanoag leader Massasoit signed a peace treaty with the colonists in which each promised to live in peace and support the other if attacked. In the fall of 1621 the Pilgrims and the Native Americans shared a bountiful harvest of corn, beans, along with fish and game, in what became known as the first American Thanksgiving. The Wampanoag was a North American tribe of the Alogonquian-Ritwan language family and of the Northeast culture area. They formerly occupied the territory between the eastern shore of Narragansett Bay and the Atlantic coast, including the islands of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. In 1620 the Wampanoag were said to be settled in about 30 villages. Although their first harvest had met with only marginal success, the Pilgrims had much to be thankful for. They were able to double their weekly food ration, they had made peace with the Indians and most of all, there had been no sickness among them for months. One day late in 1621, a tall white sail appeared on the horizon. It was the “Fortune” with 35 “saints” and “strangers” on board. Although delighted to again meet many of their brethren from the Leyden congregation, the Pilgrim leaders were dismayed to find that they brought very little, in the way of provisions. Instead, they brought a letter from Thomas Weston on behalf of the “merchant adventurers”, criticizing them for keeping the Mayflower so long the previous winter and then sending her back empty. Stung by Weston’s remarks, the Pilgrims worked hard to load up the “Fortune” with beaver and otter pelts obtained through trade with the Indians, along with hardwood timer and other items. The “Fortune” departed on December 13, loaded down with enough cargo to satisfy almost half of the Pilgrim’s debt to the merchants. On the way back to England, the “Fortune” was captured by a French privateer and taken to a small island, where its cargo was confiscated and those on board robbed and imprisoned. They did receive one more substantial group of saints from Leyden—on the “Anne” in 1623—but with only enough provisions to sustain the new arrivals at a subsistence level until the next harvest. For three years, the Pilgrims fought the grim spectre of starvation on the community of common wealth system. Then a momentous decision was made that completely altered the Pilgrim’s fortunes. Every family was assigned a parcel of land and was responsible for growing corn on their land. This had very good success; for it made all hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted. The Pilgrim harvest was so abundant that fall of 1623 that they never again suffered from lack of food. Many of them had enough extra corn that it became a major trading commodity, both within the Pilgrim community and in external trade with the Indians and other white settlers. After 1632 many of the Pilgrims began to scatter into the surrounding countryside in search of better farming opportunities, and many new towns were formed which were offshoots from Plymouth. That these Pilgrims were truly assisted by the Lord and guided by His Spirit is confirmed in the Book of Mormon, 1 Nephi 13. References: Internet searches “Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth”