Part 1 (1/2)
The Women Who Came in the Mayflower.
by Annie Russell Marble.
FOREWORD
This little book is intended as a memorial to the women who came in _The Mayflower_, and their comrades who came later in _The Ann_ and _The Fortune_, who maintained the high standards of home life in early Plymouth Colony. There is no attempt to make a genealogical study of any family. The effort is to reveal glimpses of the communal life during 1621-1623. This is supplemented by a few silhouettes of individual matrons and maidens to whose influence we may trace increased resources in domestic life and education.
One must regret the lack of proof regarding many facts, about which are conflicting statements, both of the general conditions and the individual men and women. In some instances, both points of view have been given here; at other times, the more probable surmises have been mentioned.
The author feels deep grat.i.tude, and would here express it, to the librarians of the Ma.s.sachusetts Historical Society, the New England Genealogic-Historical Register, the American Antiquarian Society, the Register of Deeds, Pilgrim Hall, and the Russell Library of Plymouth, private and public libraries of Duxbury and Marshfield, and to Mr.
Arthur Lord and all other individuals who have a.s.sisted in this research. The publications of the Society of Mayflower Descendants, and the remarkable researches of its editor, Mr. George E. Bowman, call for special appreciation.
ANNIE RUSSELL MARBLE. _Worcester, Ma.s.sachusetts._
CHAPTER I
ENDURANCE AND ADVENTURE: THE VOYAGE AND LANDING
”So they left ye goodly and pleasante citie, which had been ther resting-place near 12 years; but they knew they were pilgrimes, & looked not much on those things, but lift up their eyes to ye heavens, their dearest c.u.n.trie, and quieted their spirits.”
--_Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantations. Chap. VII._
December weather in New England, even at its best, is a test of physical endurance. With warm clothes and sheltering homes today, we find compensations for the cold winds and storms in the exhilarating winter sports and the good cheer of the holiday season.
The pa.s.sengers of _The Mayflower_ anch.o.r.ed in Plymouth harbor, three hundred years ago, lacked compensations of sports or fireside warmth. One hundred and two in number when they sailed,--of whom twenty-nine were women,--they had been crowded for ten weeks into a vessel that was intended to carry about half the number of pa.s.sengers. In low s.p.a.ces between decks, with some fine weather when the open hatchways allowed air to enter and more stormy days when they were shut in amid discomforts of all kinds, they had come at last within sight of the place where, contrary to their plans, they were destined to make their settlement.
At Plymouth, England, their last port in September, they had ”been kindly entertained and courteously used by divers friends there dwelling,” [Footnote: Relation or Journal of a Plantation Settled at Plymouth in New-England and Proceedings Thereof; London, 1622 (Bradford and Winslow) Abbreviated In Purchas' Pilgrim, X; iv; London, 1625.] but they were homeless now, facing a new country with frozen sh.o.r.es, menaced by wild animals and yet more fearsome savages.
Whatever trials of their good sense and st.u.r.dy faith came later, those days of waiting until shelter could be raised on sh.o.r.e, after the weeks of confinement, must have challenged their physical and spiritual fort.i.tude.
There must have been exciting days for the women on s.h.i.+pboard and in landing. There must have been hours of distress for the older and the delight in adventure which is an unchanging trait of the young of every race. Wild winds carried away some clothes and cooking-dishes from the s.h.i.+p; there was a birth and a death, and occasional illness, besides the dire seasickness. John Howland, ”the l.u.s.tie young man,”
fell overboard but he caught hold of the topsail halyard which hung extended and so held on ”though he was sundry fathoms under water,”
until he was pulled up by a rope and rescued by a boat-hook.
[Footnote: Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation; ch. 9.]
Recent research [Footnote: ”The Mayflower,” by H. G. Marsden; Eng. Historical Review, Oct., 1904; The Mayflower Descendant, Jan., 1916] has argued that the captain of _The Mayflower_ was probably not _Thomas Jones_, with reputation for severity, but a Master Christopher Jones of kindlier temper. The former captain was in Virginia, in September, 1620, according to this account. With the most generous treatment which the captain and crew could give to the women, they must have been sorely tried. There were sick to be nursed, children to be cared for, including some lively boys who played with powder and nearly caused an explosion at Cape Cod; nourishment must be found for all from a store of provisions that had been much reduced by the delays and necessary sales to satisfy their ”merchant adventurers”
before they left England. They slept on damp bedding and wore musty clothes; they lacked exercise and water for drink or cleanliness.
Joyful for them must have been the day recorded by Winslow and Bradford, [Footnote: Relation or Journal, etc. (1622).]--”On Monday the thirteenth of November our people went on sh.o.r.e to refresh themselves and our women to wash, as they had great need.”
During the anxious days when the abler men were searching on land for a site for the settlement, first on Cape Cod and later at Plymouth, there were events of excitement on the s.h.i.+p left in the harbor.
Peregrine White was born and his father's servant, Edward Thompson, died. Dorothy May Bradford, the girl-wife of the later Governor of the colony, was drowned during his absence. There were murmurings and threats against the leaders by some of the crew and others who were impatient at the long voyage, scant comforts and uncertain future.
Possibly some of the complaints came from women, but in the hearts of most of them, although no women signed their names, was the resolution that inspired the men who signed that compact in the cabin of _The Mayflower_,--”to promise all due submission and obedience.” They had pledged their ”great hope and inward zeal of laying good foundation for ye propagating and advancing ye gospell of ye kingdom of Christ in those remote parts of ye world; yea, though they should be but as stepping-stones unto others for ye performing of so great a work”; with such spirit they had been impelled to leave Holland and such faith sustained them on their long journey.
Many of the women who were pioneers at Plymouth had suffered severe hards.h.i.+ps in previous years. They could sustain their own hearts and encourage the younger ones by remembrance of the pa.s.sage from England to Holland, twelve years before, when they were searched most cruelly, even deprived of their clothes and belongings by the s.h.i.+p's master at Boston. Later they were abandoned by the Dutchman at Hull, to wait for fourteen days of frightful storm while their husbands and protectors were carried far away in a s.h.i.+p towards the coast of Norway, ”their little ones hanging about them and quaking with cold.”
[Footnote: Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation; ch. 2.]