Posted on Tuesday, September 16, 2025

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by The Association of Mature American Citizens

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On September 16, 1620, the ship Mayflower set sail from Plymouth, England, beginning a perilous voyage that would leave an indelible mark on history. Under charter, it carried 102 passengers—a group comprised about half of religious separatists seeking freedom from the Church of England, and half of more secular “adventurers,” drawn by promises of profit and land in the New World.

Their destination was originally the Virginia Colony, where English authority had already been established at Jamestown in 1607. But the journey did not go as planned. The Mayflower experienced storms, rough seas, navigational errors, and ended up far north of its intended landing spot. On November 21, 1620, after a grueling 66-day Atlantic crossing, the ship arrived at what is now Massachusetts.

Aboard the Mayflower, the passengers knew that their venture might lead to lawlessness or conflict once they disembarked—some were “Strangers,” people who were not part of the Separatist church, and there was no legal charter to govern them in their new home’s location. In response, the men drafted and signed the Mayflower Compact, an agreement to form a “civil body politic” and abide by laws made for the general good of the colony. This compact is often cited as an early, foundational example of self-governance in what would one day become the United States.

Upon landing, the Mayflower passengers first anchored in Provincetown Harbor (on the tip of Cape Cod), where they sent out surveying parties under Captain Myles Standish to seek a better location. In December, they settled across the bay in Plymouth. Their first winter was brutal—disease, exposure, and scarcity claimed nearly half their number. But over time, aided by relationships with local Indigenous peoples, adaptation to the land, and internal organization, the colony survived and grew.

The Mayflower’s departure from England and the subsequent founding of Plymouth Colony have become deeply symbolic: reminders of migration, perseverance, religious aspiration, and the challenges and contradictions of colonialism. The mythic weight of “Pilgrims” leaving Europe for religious freedom has shaped narratives of American identity, even while historians continue to examine the more complex realities—power, privilege, hardship, and the consequences for Indigenous populations—that lay behind the legend.



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