• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

WCF

History, politics, and culture articles and forum discussions.

You are here: Home / Topics / The Pilgrims in Massachusetts

- By

The Pilgrims in Massachusetts

Home › Forums › Early America › The Pilgrims in Massachusetts

  • This topic has 2 voices and 4 replies.
Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • November 24, 2006 at 7:06 pm #415 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    Did anyone else catch “Desperate Crossing” on the History Channel?  They played it a few times over the past week and I was only able to catch the middle hour and a half or so of the excellent documentary about the Pilgrims and their grand voyage (unfortunately I missed the parts I would have liked to watch, which explained their motivations for going, and which explained how they made contact with the local Indians). According to the show, the Pilgrims were given some sort of charter for land north of Jamestown but south of present-day New York City.  After a long and weary journey of about 90 days, they caught site of land at Cape Cod, Massachusetts.  They attempted to go south and around the Cape to get to the Hudson River in New York, but by the time they got there the river was so polluted they had to turn back (  😆 ok ok, I had to put that in there).  What really happened was that the turbulent waters off the Cape (just east of Nantucket Sound) were too much, and a southerly wind helped push them back north.  They decided instead to land on Cape Cod itself.  Because of this change, the original legal charter they had obtained became void and so among themselves they agreed to the infamous “Mayflower Compact” as their governing document.Their time in Cape Cod was not the best.  Although they had a break from seafaring, they were greeted by hostile Indians and were forced to find a different settlement area.  They crossed the bay and settled in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The program I watched showed how they were a bit different than how we might think of them today.  They dug up some Indian storage mounds during the winter months and took the corn that had been buried there.  They also dug up some Indian burial mounds, and I believe they allegedly looted some of the graves.  Interviewed on the show were some present-day Native Americans who discussed what went on back then.  It was interesting to see the differing points of view, even though I thought at least one of the interviewees might be a bit “P.C.”.  So anyway, what do you think of the Pilgrims?  Should their actions in disturbing the Indian mounds be condemned?  Did they even have right to land where they did?  And do you think the story of their voyage and settlement is seen in modern times through the disinfected Victorian view rather than cold, harsh eyes which saw what it was really like?

    November 28, 2006 at 2:41 am #7168 Reply
    Stumpfoot
    Participant

    I saw the first hour. Their motivation for going was about what you would expect; religious persecution. It seems the left England in 1608 and went to Holland for 12 years before they left for America. While preparing for the trip they hired a mercenary to teach them how to defend themselves, Miles Standish. They did not conform to the church of England and did not celebrate Christmas, felt it was too Pagan and no one reaaly knew the exact date of Christs birth.

    November 28, 2006 at 3:37 am #7169 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    Thanks for that synopsis.  You mention that Miles Standish trained them before they went on their trip.  He might be an interesting figure to study.  After they arrived in America they began to get sick and die off in high numbers.  I believe of the 100+ that went on the trip, around half died before they got through the first winter.  I think they noted, however, that Miles Standish was one of two figures who regularly tended for the sick.  That was impressive since he was a “man of war”.On a side note, I thought it was interesting to see the Pilgrims – who I gathered were more or less pacifists – carrying guns and fighting off the invading Indians.

    November 28, 2006 at 8:07 am #7170 Reply
    Stumpfoot
    Participant

    That was an interesting point made in the show. They wernt as pacifist as legend has it or as sexually repressed as legend has it.

    November 25, 2008 at 7:20 am #7171 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    This was a good documentary on the Pilgrims.  I need to catch it again sometime.  Looks like I saw it two years ago.  How time flies!

    November 26, 2008 at 6:50 am #7172 Reply
    Stumpfoot
    Participant

    Read mayflower by Nathanial Philbrook. It coevers all this and includes a very good chapter on King Phillips war.

  • Author
    Posts
Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
Reply To: The Pilgrims in Massachusetts
Your information:




Primary Sidebar

Login

Log In
Register Lost Password

Blog Categories

Search blog articles

Before Footer

  • Did Julian the Apostate’s plan ever have a chance?

    Julian the Apostate stands as an enigmatic figure among Roman emperors, ascending to power in 361 AD …

    Read More

    Did Julian the Apostate’s plan ever have a chance?
  • The Babylonian Bride

    Marriage customs in Ancient Babylon Ancient Babylonia was a society, which, although it did not …

    Read More

    The Babylonian Bride
  • The fall of Athens

    In 407 B.C. and again in 405 B.C.. the Spartans in alliance with their old enemies, the Persians, …

    Read More

    The fall of Athens

Footer

Posts by topic

2016 Election Alexander Hamilton American Revolution archaeology Aristotle Ben Franklin Black Americans Charles Dickens Christianity Christmas Constantine Custer's Last Stand Egypt email engineering England forum security Founding Fathers France future history George Washington Germany Greece hacker Hitler Industrial Revolution Ireland James Madison Jewish medieval military history Paleolithic philosophy pilgrimage Rome Russia SEO Slavery Socrates spammer technology Trump World War I World War II Year In Review

Recent Topics

  • Midsummer Night: June 25th
  • Testing out a new feature
  • Did Julian the Apostate’s plan ever have a chance?
  • Release of the JFK Files
  • What was the greatest military advancement of all time?

RSS Ancient News

Recent Forum Replies

  • Going to feature old posts
  • What’s new?
  • Testing out a new feature
  • Testing out a new feature
  • Testing out a new feature

Copyright © 2025 · Contact

Insert/edit link

Enter the destination URL

Or link to existing content

    No search term specified. Showing recent items. Search or use up and down arrow keys to select an item.