The Story of the PilgrimsIn the fourteenth century, the Roman Catholic Church reigned supreme in England. The first break from the Church occurred in the early 1500s when King Henry VII wanted to divorce his wife, Catherine. The King's break with the Roman Catholic Church created the Anglican Church (Church of England) which, though not entirely Protestant, nonetheless allowed a revival of Protestantism. Many of these Protestants were called Puritans "because of their wish to purify and reform the State Church." Religious persecution continued through the 1600s, however, for any group that varied too far from the teachings of the Church of England. The Pilgrims evolved from the Puritans. The author endeavors "to make plain something of the exalted character of the men and women whom preeminently the world has agreed to call the Pilgrims...." who "maintained steadily their lofty intellectual, moral, and religious standards and soon exerted an enlightening influence upon the world out of all proportion to the smallness of their colony." This informative and readable history includes biographical sketches of Robert Browne, William Brewster, William Bradford, and John Robinson, as well as many notes on lesser known but nonetheless important early Pilgrims. The Pilgrim towns of Scrooby and Austerfield in England are described in detail, as is the now-famous Plymouth Colony of 1620 in Massachusetts. The author describes the colony in detail, devoting chapters to its early life, commercial history, and first year of existence. This book was originally printed as a series of weekly articles in 1893 for members of the Scrooby Clubs, a nationwide collection of individuals associated with the Congregational Church. (1894, 1990), 2022, 51/2x81/2, paper, index, 386 pp. |
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... Adventurers in Eng- land , who had engaged to see that the col- ony was properly supplied with what it needed , were shamefully negligent in re- spect to both quantity and quality of the goods sent out . It is evident , also , that ...
... Adventurers and their almost complete indifference to the needs of the colonists . It would have been only natural for them to be disappointed by the delay of profits from their investments in the colonial un- dertaking , had the ...
Morton Dexter. the Adventurers which they had refused to sign at Southampton . Doubtless they felt that almost any material concession was better than to risk losing wholly the evi- dently declining interest of the London merchants . The ...
... Adventurers , to hear from the mother country so seldom , and to have ship after ship arrive bringing no aid but usually in actual need of help from them . Yet they never failed to do all in their power for those who thus claimed their ...
... in common and for general consumption . Each man worked . four of the six days of the secular week for the public benefit , including that of the Adventurers in London as well as that of the Trembling in the Balance . 241.
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Brewster-Ellis Genealogy, 1566-1969 and the Matthias Mogan Genealogy, 1775-1969 Viola Mogan Stevens No preview available - 1970 |