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         Pilgrim Fathers:     more books (100)
  1. Meet the Pilgrim Fathers by Elizabeth Payne, 1966-11-12
  2. Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers of the Colony of Plymouth, 1602-1625 by Alexander Young, 1971-06
  3. John Robinson, Pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers, A Study of His Life and Times by Burgess, Walter H, 2009-08-19
  4. Saints and Strangers, Being the Lives of the Pilgrim Fathers and Their Families by George F. Willison, 1983-09
  5. Defenders of the Faith: Religion and Politics from the Pilgrim Fathers to Ronald Reagan by Wilbur Edel, 1987-03-04
  6. Saints and strangers: Being the lives of the Pilgrim Fathers and their families, with their friends and foes, and an account of their posthumous wanderings ... and the strange pilgrimages of Plymouth Rock by George Findlay Willison, 1964
  7. Saints and Strangers: Being the Lives of the Pilgrim Fathers and Their Families, with Their Friends and Foes, and an Account of the Posthumous Wanderings ... and the Strange Pilgrimages of Plymouth Rock by George F. Willison, 1981
  8. English Separatist Tradition from the Marian Martyrs to the Pilgrim Fathers (Oxford Theological Monographs) by Barrington Raymond White, 1971-07-01
  9. The Story of the Pilgrim Fathers, 1606-1623 A. D.: As Told by Themselves, Their Friends, and Their Enemies, Pages 1-866 by Edward Arber, 2010-03-23
  10. The story of the Pilgrim fathers, 1606-1623 A.D. : as told by themselves, their friends, and their e by Arber, Edward, 2009-05-20
  11. The founding of a nation; the story of the Pilgrim fathers, their voyage on the Mayflower, their early struggles, hardships and dangers, and the beginnings ... the journals of Francis Beaumont, cavalier by Frank Moody Gregg, 2010-08-14
  12. Chronicles Of The Pilgrim Fathers Of The Colony Of Plymouth, From 1602-1625 by Alexander Young, 2010-09-10
  13. The Pilgrim Fathers: Or, the Founders of New England in the Reign of James the First by William Henry Bartlett, 2010-03-08
  14. Homes And Haunts Of The Pilgrim Fathers (1899) by Alexander Mackennal, 2010-09-10

1. Leiden Promotie VVV/ Stories Of.... Pilgrim Fathers
Pilgrim Fathers hen the Pilgrims fled from England to Holland to evade persecutionthey were but one of many groups seeking refuge in Leiden.
http://www.leidenpromotie.nl/english/destad/verhalen/pilgrim/csvp010.htm
Pilgrim Fathers
hen the Pilgrims fled from England to Holland to evade persecution they were but one of many groups seeking refuge in Leiden. Holland was tolerant, after feeling the Spanish terror and converting to a sober-minded Protestantism. Also, the economic advantages of this influx of artisans and craftsmen was recognized; the boom in the Leiden cloth industry owed a lot to the arrival of French and Flemish weavers.
The Pilgrims led a quiet life in Leiden between 1609 and 1620. They held their services in a chapel of the university. William Bradford was a member of the wool guild and reverend John Robinson lived in the spot where later the Jean Pesijn almshouses were built. Robinson stayed in Leiden, died and was buried in the Peter's Church in 1625. In the Pieterskerkchoorsteeg one can still find the house where William Brewster's Pilgrim Press produced dissident pamphlets which were smuggled to England. But peace and quiet wasn't enough for the Pilgrims. The tolerance they enjoyed also became a source of irritation. Too many different creeds and lifestyles influenced their offspring and after 12 years they decided to leave for the New World to found a society completely based on their convictions.
The Leiden American Pilgrim Museum in the Beschuitsteeg treats the Leiden stay of the Pilgrims.

2. Scrooby
For Next Page of Pilgrim Fathers click Plymouth
http://www.times1190.freeserve.co.uk/scrooby.htm
Times Separatists Escape to Holland
A utumn 1608 A Puritan Separatists' group formed in Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, and led by William Brewster, have escaped to Holland without royal permission. After enduring prison in England and uncertain sea voyages, the group were hoping to settle in Amsterdam.
  • S ome Separatists embarked last spring from a quiet spot on the East coast between Grimsby and Hull in a Dutch ship, arriving in Holland after enduring a terrible sea journey all of 14 days later. The women and children left behind were all arrested but the constables did not know what to do with them and they were eventually released to join their menfolk in Amsterdam. The Scrooby group have joined the members of Rev. John Smith's Gainsborough Separatists who moved to Amsterdam a year ago.
Puritans T he Separatists were part of the Puritan movement who want to purify the church, carry reformation beyond the Act of Uniformity (1559) that orders every minister to use the Book of Common Prayer. They believed in freedom of worship and the simplicity of religious life, wanting more emphasis on preaching than ritual or doctrine.

3. Pilgrim Fathers - Encyclopedia Article From Britannica.com
Search Pilgrim Fathers at Britannica.com for the Web's best sites, news and magazine articles, and related products.
http://www.britannica.com/seo/p/pilgrim-fathers
Search Pilgrim Fathers at Britannica.com for the Web's best sites, news and magazine articles, and related products. To view the complete article, sign up for Britannica's premium service -
Pilgrim Fathers
in American colonial history, settlers of Plymouth , Mass., the first permanent colony in New England (1620). Of the 102 colonists, 35 were members of the English Separatist Church (a radical faction of Puritanism) who had earlier fled to Leiden, the Netherlands, to escape persecution at home. Seeking a more abundant life ... Need more? Complete articles are available to premium service members. Information on site licenses is also available.
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4. Villages Of The Pilgrim Fathers
Villages of the Pilgrim Fathers The men who led and inspired the Pilgrim Fathers came mostly from small rural villages in the North Nottinghamshire area.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/steve_booth/pilgrim.htm

5. PROJECT GUTENBERG OFFICIAL HOME SITE -- Listing By AUTHOR
Pilgrim Fathers.
http://promo.net/cgi-promo/pg/cat.cgi?&label=ID&ftpsite=ftp://ibiblio.or

6. PILGRIM FATHERS EN LEIDEN
Hieronder kreeg u wat informatie van wat rest als herinnering aan de Pilgrim Fathers in Leiden.
http://home-3.worldonline.nl/~brampate/pilgn.htm
battlhym.mid
Pilgrim Fathers in Leiden
Hieronder kreeg u wat informatie van wat rest als herinnering aan de Pilgrim Fathers in Leiden.
Echter, thans is er geen actuele informatie meer.
Kies voor "Pilgrim links" voor verdere informatie.
Pilgrim links

Home
: 31 juli 2001
Ik ben altijd laat.
Mijn voorouders moeten met de 'Juneflower' zijn gekomen.

7. Leiden Promotie VVV/ Verhalen Van.... Pilgrim Fathers
Pilgrim Fathers oen de Pilgrims vanuit Engeland naar Holland vluchtten om vervolgingte ontlopen, waren ze èèn van de vele groepen die veiligheid vonden in
http://www.leidenpromotie.nl/destad/verhalen/pilgrim/csvp010.htm
Pilgrim Fathers
de Leidse lakenindustrie
had veel te danken aan de komst van bijvoorbeeld Franse en Vlaamse wevers.
De Pilgrims leidden van 1609 tot 1620 een rustig leven in Leiden. Ze hielden hun kerkdiensten in een kapel van de universiteit. William Bradford was lid van het wolgilde en dominee John Robinson woonde op de plek waar later het Jean Pesijnhofje werd gebouwd. Robinson bleef achter in Leiden, stierf en werd begraven in de Pieterskerk in 1625. In de Pieterskerkchoorsteeg is nog steeds het huis te vinden waar William Brewster met zijn Pilgrim Press
Momenteel is ter nagedachtenis van het verblijf van de Pilgrim Fathers in de Beschuitsteeg het Leiden American Pilgrim Museum ingericht.

8. Camelot Village: Britain's Heritage And History
THE Pilgrim Fathers. In the early 16th century, many English Protestants were dissatisfied with the Church of England.
http://www.camelotintl.com/world/01pilgrim.html

Stay with us and see
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THE PILGRIM FATHERS
The letters patent issued in 1621 by King James I gave the Mayflower Pilgrims the right to own the land where they had settled. A letters patent is a public document in which a king or queen confers certain rights on the holder. Ten years after the Pilgrims landed, English Puritans started arriving in New England in large numbers. The city of Salem was founded in 1626, and in 1692 witchcraft trials held there led to the execution of 20 townsfolk, most of them women.

9. Squanto--Yaffles & Yaffles
The life story of Squantum (Squanto), a native american who helped the Pilgrim Fathers.
http://www.baccalieu.com/squantum
"A stranger might think we were gone adrift. That is, until he knew about our moorin's and our holdin' ground." Ted RussellThe Holdin' Ground
You'd see my applet if you had a Java-capable browser.
Squantum (Squanto) and Cupids
On March 16, 1621, an important event occured for the Pilgrim Fathers. An Indian, Samoset, walked into their Plymouth settlement and called out "Welcome Englishmen, Welcome Englishmen." After he spoke, the Pilgrims whispered in amazement. The man spoke English. He seemed friendly, so the Pilgrims greeted him openly, yet cautiously. Samoset told them he would return with his friend who spoke better English. When he returned as he had promised, he brought not only his friend Squantum (Squanto,) but also Massasoit (the sachem or tribal chief.) Samoset indroduced Squantum to the Pilgrims as "a native of this place who had been in England and could speak better English than himself.(1)" With the help of Squantum's interpretation, Massasoit and Governor Carver made a peace treaty that would last for at least fifty more years.
Meeting the Pilgrims, From a Painting by Richard Williams, Scholastic Books.

10. Pilgrims
The story of New England's Pilgrim Fathers. Part of an etext on thehistory of the United States. The Pilgrim Fathers. Introduction
http://www.usahistory.info/New-England/Pilgrims.html
Founding Fathers Home Page US History E-Text New England
The Pilgrim Fathers
Introduction to Colonization of New England
Massachusetts Bay
Connecticut
Rhode Island and Providence
... New Hampshire
The Separatists were less numerous by far than other classes of Nonconformists, yet they formed the advance guard of the great Puritan exodus from the mother country to the shores of New England. The town of Scrooby in Nottinghamshire was the center of a scattered congregation of Separatists whose minister was John Robinson and whose ruling elder was William Brewster, the village postmaster. After enduring many persecutions this little band of Christians, who now became "Pilgrims," escaped with difficulty from their native land to Amsterdam, Holland, whence a year later they removed to Leyden. Here they dwelt for eleven years, exiles for conscience' sake, earning their bread by the labor of their hands. But the Pilgrims felt that Holland was not their home; they could not endure the thought of giving up their language and customs for those of the Dutch, nor were they willing to return to their native England, where religious persecution had not abated. They had heard of the colony of Virginia , and their thoughts were directed to the wilderness of the New World.

11. Home From Home Holidays
Two bedroom selfcatering apartment set in the historic Barbican. Home to the Mayflower Steps where the Pilgrim Fathers first set sail to America.
http://www.selfcatering-accommodation-plymouth.co.uk
please wait while we redirect you

12. New England Colonies
Introduction to Colonization of New England Pilgrim Fathers Massachusetts Bay Connecticut Rhode Island and Providence New Hampshire Also see New England
http://www.usahistory.info/New-England/
Founding Fathers Home Page US History E-Text New England
CHAPTER V Colonization
New England
Introduction to Colonization of New England
Pilgrim Fathers
Massachusetts Bay Connecticut
Rhode Island and Providence
... New Hampshire
Also see: New England Affairs
When North America was first settled by the English race the blessings of religious freedom had not yet fully dawned upon mankind. For a century the Christian world had struggled with the intolerant spirit of the Middle Ages. Much, indeed, had been accomplished, but the evolution was slow, and another century must elapse before one could stand in the broad daylight of religious liberty. These Dissenters, or Nonconformists, as they were often called, were very numerous during the reign of James I. James was a narrow-minded pedant, and probably without any very deep religious convictions. Bred in the Presbyterian faith, he despised Presbyterianism because incompatible with his ideas of monarchy. Of the Puritans he said, "I will make them conform, or I will harry them out of the land." They refused to conform, and the cruel monarch did the latter he harried them out of the land.
Source: " History of the United States of America ," by Henry William Elson, The MacMillan Company, New York, 1904. Chapter IV, page 98. Transcribed by Kathy Leigh.

13. Welcome To SAIL1620
Society, historical, factual, and genealogical information about the Pilgrim Fathers.
http://www.sail1620.org
elcome to the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania web page. One of fifty-two societies in the U.S. and Canada, the Pennsylvania Society consists of descendants of the Pilgrims, the 102 English passengers who came to New England from Holland aboard the ship Mayflower in 1620. On September 16, 1620, 102 men, women, children, servants
and craftsmen, plus officers and seaman set sail from
Plymouth, England, on an overburdened, 180-ton ship called
the Mayflower . The rest is history. Unfortunately, time has
blurred the Pilgrims' history. Many still confuse the
Mayflower's passengers with the Puritans, a strict religious
sect, who landed a decade later at Salem, Massachusetts. SAIL1620 is designed to be fun as well as an educational road map to this corner of 17th century history. Within the pages of this Web site we have tried to provided you with useful information, not just about our state society, but also a clear and factual reference to the lives and history of the Pilgrim Forefathers, Plymouth Colony, and their ship the Mayflower
© 2002 Society of Mayflower Descendants In The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Pilgrim Images Courtesy of Plimoth Plantation

14. Pilgrim Fathers - University Of Maryland
Pilgrim Fathers The Mayflower Compact University Libraries, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 207427011 (301)405-0800 Please send comments and suggestions to the Libraries' Webmaster.
http://www.lib.umd.edu/ETC/ReadingRoom/Nonfiction/Pilgrimfathers
Pilgrim Fathers
The Mayflower Compact

University Libraries
University of Maryland , College Park, MD 20742-7011 (301)405-0800
Please send comments and suggestions to the Libraries' Webmaster
Content questions should be directed to Information Provider
Last Revised: September 2001

15. Full Text Of Chronicles Of The Pilgrim Fathers By Ernest Rhys (ed)
Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers. Table of contents. Introduction. New England’sMemorial. Chapter 1. Chapter 2. Chapter 3. Chapter 4. Chapter 5. Chapter 6. Chapter7.
http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/60/107/
Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers Table of contents Introduction Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 ... FAQ for more details.

16. Pilgrims
The story of New England's Pilgrim Fathers. Part of an etext on the history of the United States. The Pilgrim Fathers. Introduction to Colonization of New England. Pilgrim Fathers Massachusetts Bay Connecticut
http://www.foundingfathers.info/us-history/New-England/Pilgrims.html
Founding Fathers Home Page US History E-Text New England
The Pilgrim Fathers
Introduction to Colonization of New England
Massachusetts Bay
Connecticut
Rhode Island and Providence
... New Hampshire
The Separatists were less numerous by far than other classes of Nonconformists, yet they formed the advance guard of the great Puritan exodus from the mother country to the shores of New England. The town of Scrooby in Nottinghamshire was the center of a scattered congregation of Separatists whose minister was John Robinson and whose ruling elder was William Brewster, the village postmaster. After enduring many persecutions this little band of Christians, who now became "Pilgrims," escaped with difficulty from their native land to Amsterdam, Holland, whence a year later they removed to Leyden. Here they dwelt for eleven years, exiles for conscience' sake, earning their bread by the labor of their hands. But the Pilgrims felt that Holland was not their home; they could not endure the thought of giving up their language and customs for those of the Dutch, nor were they willing to return to their native England, where religious persecution had not abated. They had heard of the colony of Virginia , and their thoughts were directed to the wilderness of the New World.

17. Chapter Introduction Of Chronicles Of The Pilgrim Fathers By Ernest Rhys (ed)
Introduction. Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers with an Introductionby John Masefield. The Brownist emigration, known to Americans
http://www.bibliomania.com/2/1/60/107/20815/1.html
Introduction Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers with an Introduction by John Masefield They entered into covenant to walk with God and one with another, in the enjoyment of the Ordinances of God, according to the Primitive Patern in the Word of God. But finding by experience they could not peaceably enjoy their own liberty in their Native Country, without offence to others that were differently minded, they took up thoughts of removing The prisoners in country gaols were then supported out of the rates. The keeping of large numbers of people in prison, in idleness, proved to be a great burden upon the rates of the towns where they were gaoled. The authorities who felt the burden soon became anxious to get rid of their prisoners. They released them and connived at their leaving the country. By August 1608, the whole party was safely in Amsterdam. During the next few months, after some contention with the party from Gainsborough, a hundred of the Scrooby party obtained leave to go to Leyden, where they settled down to the manufacture of woollen goods. They were joined from time to time by other Separatists from England. In a few years their communion numbered some three hundred souls, among whom were Edward Winslow, John Carver, and Miles Standish. In the year 1617, these exiles began to realize that Holland, though a seasonable refuge, could not be their abiding place. The children were growing up. The parents did not wish to send them to Dutch schools, because the Dutch children were of bad behaviour. The parents feared that the children, if sent to school in Holland, would receive evil communications and lose something of their nationality. No one is so proud of his nationality as the exile. The fear that the colony might become a part of the Dutch population caused the leaders to think of travelling elsewhere. Guiana, the first place suggested, was rejected as unsuitable, because it was supposed to contain gold. Gold, or the prospect of finding

18. Pilgrims In Leiden
De komst van de Pilgrim Fathers naar Leiden heeft bijgedragen aan deze bijzondere reputatie.
http://www.leidenarchief.nl/pilgrims/html/pilgrims/top_html/pilgrims.html
introductie zoeken bronnen reageren introductie zoeken bronnen reageren

19. The Pilgrim Fathers
The Pilgrim Fathers by Brenda Ralph Lewis THE Pilgrim Fathers Ever since the Spaniardsbecame the first Europeans to colonise America, this ÔNew WorldÕ
http://www.britannia.com/history/pilgrim.html
F O O T N O T E S o f H I S T O R Y Britannia Departments • Home • Business Centre - Advertising • Shop Britannia - Book Store - City Pages - London - Magical History Tour - Maps • History - King Arthur - Historical Documents - Earth Mysteries - Europe in Retrospect • The Monarchy - Monarchs Biographies - Diana Remembered • Panorama - News - Sports - What's Cooking • Celtic World - Wales - Scotland • Government - Prime Ministers • The Arts - Museums - Literature - Humor - Music - Theatre
Prehistory
The Romans Age of Arthur AngloSaxons ... 20th Century
The Pilgrim Fathers
by Brenda Ralph Lewis
THE PILGRIM FATHERS Ever since the Spaniards became the first Europeans to colonise America, this ÔNew WorldÕ possessed a dazzling reputation as a land of opportunity. Here, the shackles of poverty, restriction and injustice would magically fall away and in this second Garden of Eden, men and women could at long last be free to pursue their own destiny. It was, of course, a utopian dream and took no account of the perils that lurked in unknown territory which was already occupied by native Americans, not all of whom were friendly. Nevertheless, the dream was extremely potent, not only for those who sought AmericaÕs fabled wealth, but those whose consciences were chained by religious persecution.
The Protestant Reformation, which had begun in 1517, had reached England some twenty years later. As elsewhere in Europe, it spawned dissenting minorities who were rather more ascetic in the practice of their new faith than the Church of England which was Protestant in name, but was, effectively, Catholicism without the Pope. Of these, the plain-living Puritans who eschewed what they saw as the gaudy, papist show of the English church, were the most overt and became the most oppressed. In 1609, the Puritans found England so inimical that 35 of them left the country and settled at Leyden, in Holland. Holland was much more to their strict religious taste, but after ten years, the Puritans began to seek a better freedom than a patch in a foreign land.

20. Britannia.com: Hidden London By Jan Collie
The Pilgrim Fathers 1620 The story of the Mayflower and the small band of religiousdissidents who boarded her in the hope of finding freedom in the New World
http://www.britannia.com/hiddenlondon/pilgrim_fathers.html
Shakespeare's London Dickens' London The American Connection Churches with Character ... Wandering Wheels
The Pilgrim Fathers
The story of the Mayflower and the small band of religious dissidents who boarded her in the hope of finding freedom in the New World must be one of the best-known tales in history.
Determined to win the right to worship according to their own consciences, 101 men, women and children set out from Plymouth, England on a perilous journey across the Atlantic Ocean. Their intended destination was the British colony of Virginia but the Mayflower was blown around 500 miles off course and they finally took shelter in a natural harbour at what later became Provincetown, Massachusetts.
After exploring the area, the travellers disembarked near the head of Cape Cod on December 21, 1620 but arguments had broken out between them over how the colony they intended to found should be governed. This led to the formulation of a binding agreement known as the Mayflower Compact which was effectively the first constitution to be written in America.
Now a unified group, the passengers of the

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