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Minter, Desire, (Norwich, Norfolk), a servant of John Carver whose parents died in Leiden. ... He is the only Mayflower passenger to have his gravestone still where ...
John Howland died February 23, 1672/3 at the age of 80, having outlived most of the other male Mayflower passengers except George Soule (who died in 1679), John Alden (died 1687), and John Cooke (died 1695, and was the son of Mayflower passenger Francis Cooke). Richard More, one of the 'Mayflower Bastards' died after 19 March 1693/4, but before ...
Desire Minter: 18 Lived with the Carvers. She was not well and later returned to England. Maid: 18 Married in America and died soon after. It is possible that she was Dorothy, second wife of Francis Eaton. John Howland: 27 Servant in the Carver household, fell overboard from the Mayflower during a storm. By the providence of God, he grabbed ...
Mayflower was an English sailing ship that transported a group of English families, known today as the Pilgrims, from England to the New World in 1620. After 10 weeks at sea, Mayflower, with 102 passengers and a crew of about 30, reached what is today the United States, dropping anchor near the tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, on November 21 [O.S. November 11], 1620.
List of Mayflower passengers who died at sea November/December 1620; List of Mayflower passengers who died in the winter of 1620–21; Mayflower Society; A. John Alden;
The 102 passengers and approximately 30 crew of the Mayflower, who came from England and the Netherlands, set sail Sept. 16, 1620, and have commonly been portrayed as pilgrims seeking religious ...
The journal was written between 1630 and 1651 and describes the story of the Pilgrims from 1608, when they settled in the Dutch Republic on the European mainland through the 1620 Mayflower voyage to the New World, until the year 1647. The book ends with a list of Mayflower passengers and what happened to them which was written in 1651.
The Landing of the Pilgrims (1877) by Henry A. Bacon.This painting is in the Pilgrim Hall Museum, Plymouth, Massachusetts.. Edward and Ann Tilley came aboard the Mayflower without any children of their own, but in company with two young relatives of Ann's – her sixteen-year-old nephew Henry Samson and her one-year-old niece Humility Cooper.