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Mayflower Related Links - CT Research Centers

  • The Connecticut Historical Society at http://www.chs.org provides excellent genealogical material covering our geographic region. Some of the world famous researchers such as Donald Lines Jacobus and others have their genealogical collections stored here. Thousands of unpublished manuscripts and family letters, documents, bible records, etc. can be found.  A Staff of dedicated librarians are there to help.
  • The Connecticut State Library at http://www.cslib.org/handg.htm has a wonderful collection of unique CT State Records, including the Barbour Collection of Vital Records, the Hale Cemetery Inscriptions, as well as hundred of genealogies, maps, Bible Records, Probate Records, Church records, Newspapers  and more. A well trained staff is ready to help you locate the records you will need.

  • The New England Historic and Genealogical Society at http://www.newenglandancestors.org this is a fabulous website for New England research, members have access to premier record databases. The library in Boston, Massachusetts has one of the largest collection of New England genealogies, Vital Records, manuscripts and a well trained staff.

  • The Connecticut Society of Genealogists at http://www.ctfamilyhistory.com The premier CT Society for Connecticut Research is located in West Hartford, CT and has a library for research and a website. Membership in this society allows you to search records at the town halls with relative ease. Classes on genealogical research are offered as well as other interesting topics focusing on genealogy. Now Offers Footnote.com as part of membership.

  • The Godfrey Memorial Library at http://www.godfrey.org   This library, located in Middletown, CT, has a website, online databases and a wonderful research library staffed with knowledgable staff.  There is also a FHC ( Family History Center) inside the library where you can order films from the vast Salt Lake City library to view at Godfrey.

  • The Milford Public Library at http://www.milfordlibrary.org. This library has a genealogy room with Milford and surrounding town history. The FIRST monday of each month a FREE Genealogy class is offered from 1 to 3 p.m. All are welcome. Contact Gregory Thompson for more information on the genealogy classes at GThomp5749@aol.com

  • Pilgrim Hall Museum. To learn more about its collection, contact http://www.pilgrimhall.org  The former Pilgrim Society is part of this organization. Here you will find anything you ever wanted to know about the Pilgrims, as well as some of the Pilgrim personal belongings, such as the Brewster Chair and Chest, and other items. They have a wonderful gift shop as well.

Mayflower Family Society Websites

  • The Warren Cousins ( No Web Site) C/O George C. Bingham, Registrar 208 Lewis Rd, Belmont, MA 02478-383
  • The Myles Standish Society ( No Web Site)  C/O Becky Lindgren-Dyas, 1129 Huntleigh Dr. Naperville, IL 60540

The Massing of the Colors Link  http://photopeach.com/album/hcjbxo?invitecode=093227fl0f

 

     

 

 

Books of Interest to Mayflower Scholars

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN QUESTIONS & ANSWERS CONCERNING THE PILGRIMS, by William Muttart and Linda R. Ashley.

In years past, many of us believed that the passengers who arrived o the Mayflower in 1620 called themselve Pilgrims, were united in their desire to seek religious freedom, landed on Plymouth Rock and celebrated the first Thanksgiving. We now realize that these previously held beliefs were largely incorrect. This book attempts to provide accurate and objective answers to some of the questions about the Pilgrims that have frequently been the source of misunderstanding or controversy over the years.

An fascinating book for all those interested in Mayflower ancestry, this book can be purchased from the author for $16.95 plus shipping. email at mayflowerbooks@99main.com for details.

Paintings & Stories

Paintings of the Mayflower and accompanying articles from Mike Haywoodof Cornwall, United Kingdom are to be found posted below. He is apainter of marine subjects and his website, with more of his work is:http://www.mikehaywoodart.co.uk
 
The Mayflower is Battered by Mountainous Seas and Galeforce Winds
In 1620, at this time, fierce Atlantic storms are pounding the tiny Mayflower. Captain Jones is forced to take in every stitch of canvas and leave the vessel to drift helplessly like a piece of flotsam. The passengers are in the depths of misery, having to endure the fetid overcrowded conditions below decks. Seawater has soaked their bedding and clothes for weeks on end. William Bradford described the event as follows:

........ and met with many fierce storms, with which the ship was shroudly shaken, and her upper works made very leaky; and one of the main beams in the mid ships was bowed and cracked, which put them in some fear that the ship could not be able to perform the voyage. In sundry of these storms the winds were so fierce, and the seas so high, as they could not bear a knot of sail, but were forced to hull, for divers days together.

 
Mayflower Drowning Man Shapes the Course of American History
In 1620, at this time, another disaster struck the storm tossed Mayflower in mid Atlantic. One of the passengers, a servant called John Howland, was swept overboard by a mountainous wave and then miraculously rescued. John Howland went on to be the thirteenth signatory of the Mayflower Compact and was present at the first Thanksgiving. He sired 10 children and had 82 grandchildren. Had he lost his hold and drowned on that fateful day, the two Presidents Bush, President Roosevelt and Humphrey Bogart would not have existed as they are all descendants of John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley.

Pilgrim William Bradford described the event as follows:
'' in a mighty storme, a lustie yonge man (called John Howland)coming upon some occasion above the grattings, was, with a seele of the shipe throwne in the sea; but it pleased God that he caught hould of the top-saile halliards, which hunge over board, and rane out at length; yet he held his hould (though he was sundrie fathomes under water) till he was hald up by the same rope to the brime of the water, and then with a boat hooke and other means got into the shipe againe, and his life saved; and though he was something ill with it, yet he lived many years after, and became a profitable member both in church and commone wealthe''

 

Mayflower Almost Shipwrecked Off Cape Cod
On November 9th ,1620, the Mayflower's crew sighted Cape Cod and attempted to sail south to the mouth of the Hudson's River, near modern-day Long Island, New York.

Although the weather was fine, they were caught in a riptide and nearly shipwrecked on the shallow sand banks to the south of the Cape at Monomoy Point. Pilgrim William Bradford described the event as follows:

''After some deliberation had amongst them selves and with the master of the ship, they tacked aboute and resolved to stande for the southward (the wind and weather being faire) to finde some place aboute Hudson's River for their habitation. But after they had sailed that course aboute halfe the day, they fell amongst deangerous shoulds and roring breakers, and they were so farr intangled ther with as they conceived them selves in great danger; and the wind shrinking upon them withall, they resolved to bear up againe for the Cape, and thought themselves hapy to gett out of those dangers before night overtooke them, as by God's providence they did. ''

The Mayflower anchored off what is now Provincetown Harbor on November 11, and over the next month put out several expeditions to survey Cape Cod and the vicinity. The voyage from Plymouth, England to Plymouth Massachussetts is about 2,750 miles, and took the Mayflower 66 days to cover that distance.

The Mayflower left England with 102 passengers, including three pregnant women, and a crew of unknown number (approximately 25 to 30). While the Mayflower was at sea, Elizabeth Hopkins gave birth to a son who she named Oceanus. After the Mayflower had arrived and was anchored in Provincetown Harbor, Susanna White gave birth to a son, who she named Peregrine (which means "one who has made a journey"). Only one passenger and one crewman died during the arduous voyage. Within 6 months of the landing, no fewer than 52 of the Mayflower passengers died in an epidemic, including 14 of the 18 wives and 13 of the 24 husbands. Surprisingly, the survivors resolved to remain.

 
The End of the Mayflower
On April 5, 1621, the Mayflower set sail, bound for England, arriving back on May 6, bringing news of the successful establishment of Plimoth: but with a devastating 50% of the Pilgrims having lost their lives, and with no cargo of lumber, furs and fish for profit.

The Mayflower then sailed to France, bringing home to London a cargo of salt. Shortly after, her master and quarter-owner, Christopher Jones, fell sick. He died in March 1623. My painting shows the Mayflower in 1624, sitting in ruins in the river Thames. The sunset is symbolic of the end of the life of the vessel. The Port of London is in the background, soon to exploit the riches of the New World, unaware of the historic importance of the decaying hulk in its midst. The Mayflower was valued at £128, including 5 anchors, the suit of worn sails, an old pitch pot and kettle (a large cauldron). The ship was probably sold off as scrap lumber.

In 1920, J. Rendal Harris claimed to have discovered Mayflower timbers in amedieval barn at Jordans, situated 25 miles northwest of London. Despite the total lack of evidence and no supporting documentation, this theory has been accepted by the mass media, and has found itself in "National Geographic," and as a question on Jeopardy. Nonetheless it is almost certainly not the Mayflower. I have painted some foxes on the side of the cart on which the timber is being loaded, alluding to this hoax!