Topic Page: Pilgrims (New Plymouth Colony)

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Topic Page: Pilgrims (New Plymouth Colony) Definition: Pilgrims from Philip's Encyclopedia (Pilgrim Fathers) Group of English Puritans who emigrated to North America in 1620. After fleeing to Leiden, Netherlands, in 1608, seeking refuge from persecution in England, they decided to look for greater religious freedom by founding a religious society in America. They sailed from Plymouth, England, on the Mayflower and founded the Plymouth Colony in present-day Massachusetts. Summary Article: Pilgrims from Encyclopedia of American Studies The Pilgrims were English settlers, members of a Separatist sect, who emigrated to New England in 1620 in search of the opportunity to practice their religion without persecution. England had been in religious turmoil for years. Henry VIII challenged the Pope's authority and broke with Rome in the 1530s, assuming the role of head of the church. The Image from: Landing of the monarchs who followed Henry also reigned over the official church, but Pilgrims at Plymouth, they embraced, successively, Protestantism, Catholicism under Rome, December... in Britain and and then Henry's Anglican doctrine again. Each change of direction by the Americas: Culture, the crown brought with it persecution, including imprisonment, hanging, Politics, and History and burning at the stake, of leaders of the religious groups not then in favor. It was in this climate that several hundred Separatists moved to Holland around 1600. After nearly twenty years there, however, these refugees feared they were losing their English identities, and they petitioned the crown for a place to settle in the New World. A group of 104, mostly members of this sect but also a few soldiers and adventurers, arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts, aboard the Mayflower in 1620. Just before landing all the men aboard agreed to the Mayflower Compact, a document that set forth a plan of government for the new colony. They suffered through a harsh first winter, during which nearly half the party died. The settlement became established, however, and grew slowly for about seventy years. In 1692 the Plymouth colony was absorbed into the larger (and expanding) Massachusetts Bay Colony, which the Puritans had established in Boston in 1630. The legend of the Pilgrims, and their role in American history, began to grow in detail and in importance in the years leading up to the Revolution. Annual observances in Plymouth of the Pilgrims' landing probably began in 1769, with religious ceremonies and the telling of the stories of the Pilgrims leaving England to seek religious freedom. The Mayflower Compact, which had been crafted to assure the authority of the Pilgrim majority over the other members of the original party, was exalted as evidence of the right of self-rule. In the early 1770s the Sons of Liberty used the stories of the Pilgrims' struggles to justify resistance to the British taxes and restrictions on trade. In this vein the Plymouth Liberty Boys in 1774 moved a large rock (later called Plymouth Rock) from a muddy bed in the harbor to a place of honor in the main town square. (It was moved again, in 1834, to a location near the beach.) A second period of legend-building began in the 1830s and continued until the Civil War. The Abolitionists used the stories of the Pilgrims' moral propriety and their struggle for freedom in sermons and speeches whenever they could. The heroism of the Pilgrims was also the subject of poetry and painting during this period.

Thanksgiving Day as it is now known is a recent invention. The Pilgrims may have had a feast with the Indians in 1621, but there is no record of their doing it thereafter. Thanksgiving (spelled with a small t) was an occasional day of prayer proclaimed by colonial and then, later, state governors at various times of the year. The New England states began the practice, in the early 1800s, of an annual day of thanksgiving in the fall, but the observance was never connected to the Pilgrims. In 1863 a magazine editor's persistent requests finally persuaded Abraham Lincoln to proclaim a New England style national day of thanksgiving to celebrate Union victories in the Civil War. Later presidents annually declared such days thereafter, and the tradition caught on, at least in the North. The association with the Pilgrims developed long after the Civil War. As the New England states prepared for elaborate commemorations of the 250th anniversary of the Pilgrims' landing, they tied those plans to the new national day of thanksgiving. This notion, turning the focus away from the Civil War battles, gave Southerners an acceptable reason for the observance of a Thanksgiving Day and contributed to its nationwide appeal. In 1939 President Franklin D. Roosevelt proclaimed that the fourth Thursday of November was to be fixed as the day for this holiday. Plymouth Rock, in front of PilgrimHall, 1834". c.1909. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress.

Landing of the Pilgrims, engraving. 1877. Alfred Bobbett, artist. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. The Pilgrims signing the compact, onboard the Mayflower, engraving. c.1859. Gauthier, after painting by T.H. Matteson. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress.

Thanksgiving scene in ye old Plymouth colony, cartoon. c.1912. Ehrhart, artist. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress.

Landing of the Pilgrims. Engraving by J. Andrews, 1869, after P. F. Rothermel. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. The Departure of the Pilgrim Fathers for America A.D. 1620. John Burnet, artist. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. The Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor. 1882. Print of a painting by William Fornby Halsall. Prints and Photographs Division, Bibliography Library of Congress. Abrams, Anne Uhry, The Pilgrims and Pocahontas: Rival Myths of American Origin (Westview Press 1999).

Bunker, Nick, Making Haste from Babylon: The Mayflower Pilgrims and Their World: A New History (Knopf 2010). Conforti, Joseph A., Imagining New England: Explorations of Regional Identity from the Pilgrims to the Mid-Twentieth Century (Univ. of N.C. Press 2000). Davis, William T., History of the Town of Plymouth: With a Sketch of the Origin and Growth of Separatism (J. W. Lewis 1885). Dillon, Francis, The Pilgrims (Doubleday 1975). Hodgson, Godfrey, A Great and Godly Adventure: The Pilgrims and the Myth of the First Thanksgiving (PublicAffairs 2006). McWilliams, John, New England s Crises and Cultural Memory: Literature, Politics, History, Religion, 1620-1860 (Cambridge 2004). Moore, Susan Hardman, Pilgrims: New World Settlers and the Call of Home (Yale Univ. Press 2008). Philbrick, Nathaniel, Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War (Viking 2004). Seelye, John, Memory's Nation: The Place of Plymouth Rock (Univ. of N.C. Press 1998). Winship, Michael P., Godly Republicanism: Puritans, Pilgrims, and a City on a Hill (Harvard Univ. Press 2012). Eli Bortman Copyright 2016 The American Studies Association

APA Bortman, E. (2016). Pilgrims. In S. Bronner (Ed.), Encyclopedia of American studies. MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Retrieved from https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/jhueas/pilgrims/0 Chicago Bortman, Eli. "Pilgrims." In Encyclopedia of American Studies, edited by Simon Bronner. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016. https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/jhueas/pilgrims/0 Harvard Bortman, E. (2016). Pilgrims. In S. Bronner (Ed.), Encyclopedia of American studies. [Online]. Johns Hopkins University Press. Available from: https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/jhueas/pilgrims/0 [Accessed 18 February 2018]. MLA Bortman, Eli. "Pilgrims." Encyclopedia of American Studies, edited by Simon Bronner, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1st edition, 2016. Credo Reference, https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/jhueas/pilgrims/0. Accessed 18 Feb 2018.