The Mayflower's Journey 1620 PDF
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Uploaded by SmittenAsteroid9425
Lexicon India Computer Training Institute
1620
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Summary
The Mayflower's journey to America in 1620 is recounted. It details the challenges the Pilgrims faced during their voyage, including storms, sickness, and the death of several passengers.
Full Transcript
### The Mayflower's Journey Would you have liked to travel on a small ship with more than 100 other people, all of their belongings, and possibly some farm animals for 66 days? That's what the Pilgrims did in the year 1620, on a ship called Mayflower. - Mayflower set sail from England in July 162...
### The Mayflower's Journey Would you have liked to travel on a small ship with more than 100 other people, all of their belongings, and possibly some farm animals for 66 days? That's what the Pilgrims did in the year 1620, on a ship called Mayflower. - Mayflower set sail from England in July 1620, but it had to turn back twice because Speedwell, the ship it was traveling with, leaked. - After deciding to leave the leaky Speedwell behind, Mayflower finally got underway on September 6, 1620. - In the 1600s, the ocean was full of dangers. Ships could be attacked and taken over by pirates. - Many ships in the 1600s were damaged or shipwrecked by storms. - Passengers sometimes fell overboard and drowned or got sick and died. - Although Mayflower did not sink, a few of these things actually did happen! - Mayflower wasn't taken over by pirates - the ship sailed on a northern path across the Atlantic to avoid them - but she was damaged by a bad storm halfway to America. - The storm cracked one of the massive wooden beams supporting the frame of the ship. - Fortunately, the passengers had brought along a great iron screw, which helped raise the beam back into place so the ship could continue. - In another storm, a young passenger, John Howland, was swept off the deck of the ship and into the ocean! He was saved because he grabbed onto one of the ship's ropes (or lines) and was pulled back onto the deck. - Although many people were seasick on the voyage across the Atlantic Ocean, only one person died. - He was a sailor who had been very mean to the passengers and taunted them about their seasickness. - The colonists believed he died because God was punishing him for being cruel. - One baby was born during the journey. - Elizabeth Hopkins gave birth to her first son, appropriately named Oceanus, on Mayflower. - Another baby boy, Peregrine White, was born to Susanna White after Mayflower arrived in New England. - It must have been very challenging to give birth on a moving ship, with so many people and so much seasickness around. After more than two months (66 days) at sea, the Pilgrims finally arrived at Cape Cod on November 11, 1620. A few weeks later, they sailed up the coast to Plymouth and started to build their town where a group of Wampanoag People had lived before (a sickness had killed most of them). The Pilgrims lived on the ship for a few more months, rowing ashore to build houses during the day, and returning to the ship at night. Many people began to get sick from the cold and the wet; after all, it was December! About half the people on Mayflower died that first winter from what they described as a general sickness of colds, coughs and fevers. Finally, in March 1621, there were enough houses that everyone could live on land. After a long, hard voyage, and an even harder winter, Mayflower left Plymouth to return to England on April 5, 1621.