|
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 1617 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.
At the time, fewer than half of the Congregation's members chose to leave the Netherlands aboard the Speedwell and sail to Southampton, England, where they joined a larger group of religious separatists and boarded the
Mayflower to cross the Atlantic Ocean. They departed on September 6th,
1620, 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 Mayflower arrived in Cape Cod after 65 days at sea, weighing anchor near present-day Provincetown on November 21.
Realizing that it would require a significant additional voyage to reach their goal, the Pilgrims chose to abandon their
original plans and form a community where they were. Having no legal authority to colonize the area, they met to sign their own
charter, known as the Mayflower Compact, in which they agreed to
form a self-governing community.
Although they discovered food and fresh water on Cape Cod, and even made contact with local natives, the Pilgrims eventually
settled at Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts on the other side of Cape Cod Bay. The longest surviving members of the original group of settlers were Mary Allerton and
John Alden.
The year following their arrival, a further 35 Pilgrims from the Netherlands and England set sail aboard the ship Fortune,
arriving at the Plymouth Colony on November 11, 1621.
Pilgrims are commonly portrayed as wearing black and white clothing. In reality, this was uncommon. Although the Pilgrims did
indeed seek to stamp out sin within their society, they were not as extreme as they are frequently portrayed. For instance, they
allowed drinking (although not drunkenness), they often wore brightly-colored clothing, and did not discourage sex (within
marriage, that is).
See also: Pilgrim
External link
"The Pilgrims" is also the nickname of two English football teams:
* For the 2004/05 season.
|