by S. A. Cranfill | May 10, 2020 | 17th-Century British & American History, Braving the New World, European and British Colonization of America, The Pilgrims, The Year of the Mayflower
Plymouth’s Famous Rock (author’s photo)
Physical & Spiritual Rocks of Faith & Bravery
Above, you see a famous rock (boulder) that resides for viewing within an enclosure on the beach of Plymouth, Massachusetts. At some point, the date 1620 was carved into it. Look closely and you will see where the rock had broken into two pieces and was repaired. (more…)
by S. A. Cranfill | Apr 26, 2020 | 17th-Century British & American History, Braving the New World, European and British Colonization of America, The Pilgrims, The Year of the Mayflower
Dwelling Interior, Plimouth Plantation, Plymouth, Massachusetts (author’s photo)
So they left that goodly and pleasant city which had been their resting place near twelve years; but they knew they were pilgrims…William Bradford
Why Do We Call the Mayflower Passengers “Pilgrims”?
The words above, penned (literally) by Plymouth Governor William Bradford, are a reference to the New Testament letter to the Hebrews (11:13). The letter’s eleventh chapter is known as the hall of fame of (more…)
by S. A. Cranfill | Mar 28, 2020 | 17th-Century British & American History, Braving the New World, Captain John Smith, Captain Thomas Dermer, European and British Colonization of America, Sir Ferdinando Gorges, The Pilgrims, The Year of the Mayflower
“An Extraordinary Plague”
This blog entry is dated March 28, 2020, so it is perhaps a pertinent time, as we Americans endure an unprecedented and rather peculiar quarantine, to explore a curious and historically important plague of four centuries ago.
In 1616, several years prior to the year of the Mayflower, an unseen enemy stalked (more…)
by S. A. Cranfill | Feb 8, 2020 | 17th-Century British & American History, Braving the New World, European and British Colonization of America, South America, The Pilgrims, The Year of the Mayflower
Cape Cod? New Plymouth? The Hudson River?
The Pilgrims Were Headed for Virginia?
We saw in a previous post titled “The Year of the Mayflower” (Feb 2020) that the Pilgrim Fathers had a patent to settle their own, independent colony within the greater Virginia (which stretched from modern-day South Carolina to mid-Maine), with intent to settle somewhere along the Hudson River, and that Plymouth was already named on John Smith’s map (a copy of which the Pilgrims had purchased), but that the New Plymouth was not on the itinerary. So, how did they end up on the coast of Massachusetts? (more…)
by S. A. Cranfill | Feb 6, 2020 | 17th-Century British & American History, Braving the New World, Captain John Smith, The Pilgrims, The Year of the Mayflower
The Mayflower Replica in a 2016 Plymouth Harbor (taken by author)
The Pilgrims’ 400th Anniversary Year
It’s February 2020. This next November, it will be 400 years since the Mayflower rounded “the fist” of Cape Cod’s flexed arm and found their first safe harbor near today’s Provincetown. In December, it will be 400 years since the Mayflower crew and passengers, after some exploration, anchored their ship in Plymouth Bay and sent men ashore in the shallop (for the second time) with intent to settle the place called Patuxet by the Wampanoags. (more…)
by S. A. Cranfill | Jan 12, 2020 | 17th-Century British & American History, Braving the New World, Shakespeare, Squanto
A Significant Date for Some Famous People
The year 1616 was significant not only to Pocahontas, Squanto, and Captain John Smith, but also to men who would become two of the world’s most famous writers ~ William Shakespeare and Miguel de Cervantes.
They are both said to have died on April 23rd of 1616, Shakespeare at a mere 52 and Cervantes at 68. Because of their works and their influence, English would become known as the language of Shakespeare, and Spanish would be called la lengua de Cervantes (the language of Cervantes). (more…)