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Governor William Bradford's letter book

Chapter 6: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

A fragment of a letter-book spanning 1624–1630 collects correspondence and administrative papers from the Plymouth plantation, presenting exchanges on governance, financial disputes with investors and individual partners, management of admissions and covenants among settlers, complaints about idleness and mismanagement, and reports of arrivals from Leyden. Editorial material recounts the manuscript's discovery, transmission, and editorial decisions used in its printing, and letters reveal daily difficulties of sustaining the plantation, negotiations over debts and shares, and instructions for discipline and communal order. The volume presents first-hand documentary evidence of early colonial administration and practical concerns rather than continuous narrative.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] Edition of 1856.

[2] Pullen, an obsolete word for poultry.

[3] This was unquestionably a misreading and should have been “Ouldom”, i.e. “Oldham.”—Editor.

[4] These letters I have not.

[5] He hath hitherto done it, blessed be His name!

[6] This was wrote in their own tongue.

[7] The one in French and the other in Dutch.

[8] And his consorts were dispersed.

[9] It was costly indeed, in the conclusion.

[10] Here the sum of the debts and other things were blotted out again.

[11] Since called Dorchester.