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San Diego (ship) San Esteban (1554 shipwreck) San Miguel (1551 shipwreck) Santa Anna (1522 ship) Santa Catarina do Monte Sinai; Santa Maria de Visón (de Biscione) São Bento (carrack) São João Baptista (galleon) São Martinho (1580) Speedwell (1577 ship) English ship Squirrel (1570s) English ship Swiftsure (1573)
3-masted ship For Tokugawa Ieyasu [4] 1607 England: Digby of London Popham Colony: Virginia: Pinnace: For Virginia Company: 1608 Dutch Republic: Halve Maen: Flyboat: For Dutch East India Company: 1608 England: Deptford: Red Lion of England: Merchantman: For private owner. [5] 1625 Denmark–Norway: David Balfour Trost: Fast ship For Royal ...
Pages in category "Passenger ships" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Patience Brewster – Daughter of Elder William Brewster coming from Leiden. Allotted a portion in the 1623 land division, with her sister Fear and Robert Long. Married Thomas Prence, passenger on Fortune in 1621 and future colony governor. [16] [18] Thomas Clarke - Son of John and Mary (Morton) Clarke, baptized Stepney (London) c. 1599-1600.
John of London Passenger List, Summer of 1638 The instrument behind New England’s first literary flowering Archived 2016-07-11 at the Wayback Machine Rowley and Ezekiel Rogers, The First North American Printing Press Archived 2013-01-23 at the Wayback Machine
The ship James made several trips during the early 17th century Great Migration out of England to the New World. [1] It is unclear how many ships were named James during the Great Migration, as the name James was very popular in England during the reign of James I of England (1567–1625).
List of ship launches in the 1600s; M. English ship Marigold (1650) English ship Marmaduke (1652) Mary and John; P. HMS Portsmouth (1649) HMS President (1650)
The date stated on the ship's passenger list is the date used for arrival. The table also shows the number of passengers for each voyage. The number of steerage passengers and cabin passengers is shown for voyages where the passenger list identified the two passenger classes. The June 3 to July 14, 1848 voyage was made from Liverpool, England. [7]