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A guide to Plymouth and its history

Chapter 2: FOREWORD
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About This Book

The guide surveys the settlement's origins and commemorative landscape, assembling inscriptions, monuments, and memorials that record the Mayflower passengers, the compact, and early communal life. It narrates the voyage and landings, inventories burial grounds and lists those who died in the first winter, and describes landmarks such as the landing rock, meetinghouses, early streets, fortified works, and preserved colonial houses. The book outlines civic and historical societies, their collections and ceremonies, and gathers authorities and textual references, functioning as a compact interpretive tour that links material memorials with documentary records of the colony's first decades.

FOREWORD

Plymouth preserves with loyal respect the places which are associated with her Forefathers, the Pilgrims.

In the town they founded, tablets, statues, and public monuments bear witness to the veneration that historical societies, the State, and the Nation, hold for the memory of that small group of men and women, simple in their origin, exalted in their purpose, who were destined to prove themselves great among the greatest, and whose example of a free commonwealth and a free faith, is one of the far-reaching influences in history.

Many questions are asked by visitors to Plymouth about Plymouth history and the localities of Pilgrim Life. It is the purpose of this short guide to review the Pilgrim story and give in the words of permanent inscriptions, the public estimation of the Pilgrims and their accomplishment.

Plymouth, 1938.

PILGRIM HALL

In grateful memory
Of our ancestors
Who exiled themselves from their
native country
for the sake of Religion
And here successfully laid the
foundation
of Freedom and Empire
December XXII A.D. MDCCCXX
their descendants the Pilgrim Society
have raised this edifice
August XXXI MDCCCXXIV

PLYMOUTH

“Forever honored be this, the place of our fathers’ refuge! Forever remembered the day which saw them, weary and distressed, broken in everything but spirit, poor in all but faith and courage, at last secure from the dangers of wintry seas, and impressing this shore with the first footsteps of civilized man!”

—Daniel Webster

From the oration delivered
at Plymouth December 22,
1820, in commemoration of
the first settlement of New
England.