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The romantic story of the Mayflower pilgrims, and its place in the life of to-day cover

The romantic story of the Mayflower pilgrims, and its place in the life of to-day

Chapter 16: Transcriber's Notes:
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About This Book

The narrative traces a religious separatist community's origins in English towns, their arrests and flight to Holland, and their later transatlantic voyage and settlement in New England, combining biographical sketches of individual settlers with descriptions of their trials, the first years in the colony, and the subsequent fates of the founders. It interweaves local topography and surviving memorials, presents illustrations and accounts of sites in England, Holland, and the New World, and concludes by describing twentieth-century commemorations and the effort to preserve their memory.

Transcriber's Notes:

Images were moved to a convenient paragraph break.

Footnotes were renumbered sequentially and moved to the end of the chapter.

The opening and closing illustrations are the same.

Old spellings in quoted text and poetry are retained from the original.

The following words are used interchangeably throughout this book:

  • cooperation co-operation
  • cornerstone corner-stone
  • Mayflower May-flower

Page 117

(Photograph by A. S. Burbank, Plymouth). Changed from 'Photgraph' of the original.

Index

(Naughton, 55). This is most likely Naunton, referred to on Page 55.