Showing posts with label Mayflower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mayflower. Show all posts

April 5 - Anniversary of the Mayflower's Return Trip


Posted on April 5, 2017


The Mayflower famously brought the Pilgrims to the New World in 1620. 

But - what happened to the ship, after that? Have you ever wondered about that?

Shipmaster and Captain Christopher Jones had intended to return with his ship to England as soon as the Pilgrims found a settlement site. Actually, he had intended to land south of Plymouth / Cape Cod, somewhere in what is now Virginia - but when he and the Pilgrims realized how harsh the winter weather of their actual landing site was, the winter seas were already harsh and rough, too, so they had to stay put, safe and sound, in Plymouth.


Looking at this map, it looks like the Mayflower was making
a beeline for what is now Virginia - but got swung up in a
current or storm or something like... And ended farther north!

It turned out, not so safe! Both the Pilgrims and the ship's crew fell ill. They were still sheltering in the ship when an outbreak of contagious diseases, including pneumonia and tuberculosis, combined with scurvy to make many of them very, very sick. Under the circumstances, Jones decided that he must winter in Plymouth Harbor. 

That first awful, disease-ridden winter killed off almost half of the passengers - and close to half of the crew as well!

On March 21, 1621 (the first day of spring!), the remaining passengers finally disembarked from the Mayflower. And on this date in 1621, Christopher Jones finally set sail with the ship's emptied cargo hold supplied with rocks from Plymouth Harbor in order to provide ballast and keep the boat upright - and with a decimated crew.


The Mayflower made good time on the return trip - it took less than half of the time it had taken to reach America. What a difference it makes when you travel with the westerlies, rather than trying to sail against them! The Mayflower arrived at her home port in London on May 6.

What happened after that is nothing very grand or noteworthy. Shipmaster Jones continue to use his ship for another chunk of months, but coming home from France in March, 1622, he died. For the next two years, the Mayflower just floated in her berth in London. At that point, she had become useless as a ship. She was probably broken up and her parts reused or discarded, but there isn't an actual record of her "death."  
















December 22 - Forefathers Day in Plymouth

Posted on December 22, 2016


In America, almost everybody has an immigration story. Native Americans are descended from peoples that migrated to the Americas thousands and thousands of years ago - most are descended from peoples who came to the Americas during an ice age, more than 15,000 years ago. Those people don't have immigration stories, because they are completely lost in the mists of time.

But most Americans have immigration stories that only stretch back a century or two, or less, and many of us know a fair amount about who came to the U.S., from where, when. All four of my husband's grandparents came here from the Ukraine or Sicily, for example. 

Today is all about learning about and honoring your heritage -- your ancestors. "Forefathers" is an unfortunate word, because it seems to refer only to the men -- but we all know that we wouldn't be here if there weren't "foremothers" as well!

But the main main reason for today is to celebrate one of the longest-ago migrations to the New World:

Almost 400 years ago, the Mayflower arrived in New England carrying people we now call the Pilgrims. 

They'd set sail from Plymouth, England ("Old" England), so when they arrived on December 21, 1620, they gave their landing spot the name Plymouth Rock. 



Many people who have an ancestor who was aboard the Mayflower know about that ancestor -- of course, most of us aren't related to any of the Pilgrims! -- because the knowledge of those men and women has been carefully taught from generation to generation. 

Forefathers Day was started way back in 1769, in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Even then more than a century had passed since the landing of the Mayflower, and the people who gathered together for a feast were celebrating their great-great-grandfathers and great-great-grandmothers.

I bet you're thinking, "Wait! I thought Thanksgiving was supposed to honor the Pilgrims with a feast??!"

Forefathers Day got its start way before Thanksgiving was an official, nation-wide holiday. For more than 200 years, individual colonies and then states would declare days of thanksgiving and some sort of harvest-honoring meal, often referring back to a harvest meal the Pilgrims shared with Native Americans almost a year after they landed, in the fall of 1621. The dates for all of these Thanksgiving feasts varied widely according to local harvests. Forefathers Day was celebrated in Plymouth on the same day -- December 22 -- celebrating the landing of the Pilgrims rather than their first harvest -- and even after Thanksgiving became an official holiday on the third Thursday in November, descendants of the Pilgrims continued the Forefathers Day tradition.

By the way, did you notice that the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock on December 21 and yet Forefathers Day, celebrating that landing, was on December 22? Apparently that was a problem of switching calendars; the Gregorian calendar necessitating the re-dating of every occasion, and someone made a mistake when figuring out the new date for this particular occasion. The result is, a lot of people say that Forefathers Day is on December 21 rather than December 22, even though the first such celebration and more than a century's worth of celebrations were held on the 22nd. SO confusing!




These days, the Mayflower Society dinner party still includes eating succotash, which is a stew made with vegetables, usually including corn and beans of some sort -- especially lima beans. Some people dress up their succotash with a pie-crust top or top the vegetable stew with slices of chicken or turkey. The Ancestors in Aprons website contains an old-school recipe for succotash that includes a lot of corned beef and salt pork and potatoes, plus navy beans and hominy (which is a kind of corn).

By the way, if you think today is way too close to Christmas to be holding a giant feast, remember that the Pilgrims didn't celebrate Christmas! 


Also on this date:












  





















National Haiku Poetry Day

September 6 – Sails and Salem


Posted on September 6, 2016

For any given day in the year, we can find many and varied events that happened on that day in years (even centuries) past.

Here are a few that fit together nicely:

On this date in 1492, Christopher Columbus sailed away from the Canary Islands. This was the last of the known ports of his famous voyage – it was the beginning of the Great Unknown.

On this date in 1522, the only surviving ship of Ferdinand Magellan's round-the-world journey returned to a port in Spain. On that day the Victoria became the first ship to circumnavigate the world!

On this date in 1620, the Pilgrims sailed away from Plymouth, England, on the Mayflower. The goal of this so-famous voyage was to settle in North America. Eventually, they settled in what they named Plymouth, Massachusetts.






And on this date in 1628, the Puritans settled Salem, Massachusetts.

All of these have in common the courage to face the unknown. The courage to sail off, discover and explore, or the courage to start new lives in new places.

Unfortunately, they also have in common a ruthless disregard for peoples of those newly discovered, explored, and settled lands.


I always enjoy exploring the surprising, confusing, or memorable aspects of familiar historical tales. Here are a few:

  • There is a myth that Christopher Columbus went up against the people of his day, claiming that the world was round when “everybody knew” that the world was flat. The myth goes on that Columbus was proved right – the underdog wins the day!

    There is another myth that Christopher Columbus was incredibly stupid and wrong-headed about the world. According to this myth, everyone knew that the world was round like an orange, and learned people agreed that it was really, really huge. According to this story, everybody knew that sailing across the Atlantic Ocean to China and “the Indies” was impossible, at least at that time – the distance was too far. According to this myth, Columbus stubbornly argued that the world was way smaller than it is – and he was just plain lucky to run into islands and continents conveniently located a sail-able distance from Europe.

    The reality was that experts, scholars, and navigators in the late 1400s all agreed that the world was roundish (if you want to see how even ancient scholars knew that, check out
    this article), but they disagreed about its size and shape, and they of course didn't know how much of the Earth was covered by land and how much by oceans. Columbus thought it likely that the Earth was smaller than it is, and that it was shaped more like a pear than an orange. But he was hardly alone in these thoughts – he wasn't someone who held onto a stubborn disbelief of well-established knowledge. A mathematician named Paolo Toscanelli, from Florence (now Italy), thought that Asia could be reached by sailing west – and Columbus corresponded with him. A globe made by Martin Behaim showed Asia extending much farther east than it really does, and the Atlantic islands including the Canary Islands extending much farther west than they really do; even the great (and ancient) thinker Ptolemy thought that Eurasia is much larger than it is.

So, the more correct view of Columbus is more nuanced. He certainly wasn't a great intellectual hero whose minority views were proved correct! But neither was he a know-nothing fool who ignored all the experts of his day.

  • You may have read that, even though Magellan is often given credit for being the first person to circumnavigate the globe, he didn't do it. He was killed in what we now call the Philippines, before his mission even reached “Spice Islands” (today called Indonesia). 

Magellan deserves some partial credit, since he organized the voyage, navigated the dangerous, stormy straits that bear his name around the tip of South America, and also navigated a 98-day journey across the Pacific before reaching habitable land...but two others also deserve credit:
The Basque mariner Juan Sebastian Elcano commanded the return voyage of Victoria, which was the only surviving ship out of the five that started.

A statue of Enrique, aka
Henrique
And Enrique, a personal slave of Magellan's who acted as an interpreter during the expedition, had lived in the Philippines, and historians point out that he may be the first human to have circled the globe – when the expedition reached the Philippines, his homeland!

It's interesting to note that, although most of the sailors of the Magellan expedition were Spaniards and Portuguese, the crew included men from Greece, Sicily, England, France, Germany, and North Africa. I don't know if Enrique was the only slave, or the only Asian-born person on the ship – but it's clear that the expedition was more multi-cultural than we generally picture it!


  • What is the difference between the Pilgrims of Plymouth, MA, and the Puritans of Salem, MA?

Both groups were religious Christians who believed in Calvinism (which is one of so very many Christian branch-offs).

But the Pilgrims were a separatist group who felt that they needed to separate from the Church of England. They fled from England and settled in Holland, in the Netherlands, but they feared that they might lose their English cultural identity there, so they fled even farther...all the way to the New World.

Many Puritans, on the other hand, remained within the Church of England and sought to reform it (purify it) from within. Some of these “non-separating Puritans” founded Salem and, later, created the Massachusetts Bay Colony.


(By the way, some sources make it sound as if Puritans and Pilgrims were two different groups, and other sources clearly state that Pilgrims WERE Puritans; they say that Pilgrims were a minority group of separating Puritans.)



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