@@danpatrick9080the kettle ponds are natural, formed at the end of the last Ice Age. All of Cape Cod is a glacial moraine created by the edge of the ice sheet. As the glaciers retreated, some large blocks of ice were left behind and created depressions which became kettle ponds.
@jfinlay08 we are related. At least a dozen. John and Priscilla didn't know when to stop. They had the most children. Bradford and others were my wife's side. Several killed in King Philip's War. Party. Both Lexington and/or Concord, Bunker Hill, Long Island, crossing the Delaware. And so on. 😀😀😀😀
This is just so good, Jeffrey. As if the newspaper lands on your doorstep every day. Especially important is that the account doesn't shy away from describing the reality of locals living in what was to them a post-apocalyptic world - following a plague brought on by prior contact.
@@JeffreytheLibrarian You're doing great. Look forward to the next installment. This is a nightmare for the natives who survived the plagues. Now albinos from the sea land like ghosts to steal their lands and rob from graves. In a way, it's like an echo of the sea peoples and the bronze age collapse. If this was a movie, I'd be rooting for the natives but knowing it's also their slow rolling Ragnarok.
Very nicely done! In 1979 I was stationed at Cape Cod Air Force Station (Pave Paws) just South of Plymouth on Sandwich, Mass's Flatrock Hill, a very high point on the Cape. From the roof of our 10-story radar building, you could see all the places from Provincetown to Chatham, Falmouth and Plymouth. I spent the next three years exploring all these areas, following the voyages as you described them. Wish I had your videos then!
Fascinating series of events. Excellent telling of them by you, Jeff. Thank you! They arrived pretty much at the worst possible moment, the onset of winter and its weather. Today, we forget the bone chilling cold of that rain and snow. And covering those distances on the water. Every minute surviving was an act of heroism for these people.
Yes, winter is the worst time to be there. It actually took the English a while to realize how cold it would get in New England. They figured that it would be mild, because it was a lower latitude than the British Isles, so they figured it would be warmer than Britain, but it turned out to be colder.
@@JeffreytheLibrarian This is probable, but many from Europe were already in this region prior to the pilgrims and one would think they knew that the winters here were far worse. They didn't intend to land on the Cape though, they intended to go much farther south.
I had some catching up to do on Jeff's videos. I love his style and the work he does for the graphics and to be as thorough and accurate as possible. I sit here with my morning coffee and think that this is what educational material is supposed to be like. Yum.
As a direct descendant of James Cole of Cole's Hill, I found this tremendously interesting. I had no prior knowledge of all that took place between the arrival at Provincetown and the eventual settlement at Plymouth. This is excellently done and I look forward to future videos.
Once again, a fascinating and informative video. I've said it before and will say it again. History teachers should be taking full advantage of your videos in the classroom today.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Here in 2024 my UA-cam explorations found a new corn hill to feed my curious explorers mind. Absolutely outstanding and exciting telling. Thank you so much!
Way back in the 60’s when I was taught about the Pilgrims our history books made little mention about the diseases introduced by earlier settlers had devastated the Indian populations just a couple of years before they arrived. In hindsight a very relevant part of the story. Your even tempo and clear pronunciation of words along with your use of maps make your videos easy to watch and follow along. Great channel. Thanks
For comparison, COVID 19 caused over a quarter million deaths in 2020 in US becoming the 3rd leading cause of death that year. About 350,000 people died that year
I am 42 and in my youth history used to be boring because my teachers never knew stuff like this and I was the kid that asked to many questions.This is the exact stuff ive always needed..thank you
Enjoyed that! Both of my GGGGGGGGGG- grand fathers, William White and Degory Priest, Died that winter and spring of '21. Their families, some how survived. Thanks for the well done history lesson.
Thank you for the very detailed day by day account of the Pilgrims as they explored Cape Cod . We sit in our warm homes enjoying your excellent narration thinking about what Cold and discomfort these men and women had to endure, brave and enduring soles indeed.
Thank you so much for this information. I’m so grateful for these courageous people. We’re related to William Bradford; my brother lived in East Dennis and recently passed away. I’m overwhelmed with appreciation, having spent many summers on the Cape.
Fascinating. I didn't know any of the Cape Cod history of the pilgrims. I'm in New Hampshire native who spent summers on Cape Cod at my grandfather's house.
I greatly enjoy many of your videos but this was my favorite yet. The hardships the pilgrims went through make for an excellent story…. A story I ignorantly knew little about until watching this splendid video. Cheers 🍻
As an 11th great-grandson of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins, my understanding of the Mayflower colonization was always vague. Turkeys, corn, Plymouth Rock, pilgrims having Thanksgiving with the Indians - a great big jumble. Thank you for such an enlightening account - as well as the graphics! 👍🏻
being from Plymouth County, MA in a small town called way back then Little Comfort" it eventuallu became Whitman MA and a leather goods manufacturing region. It was the best town and I miss it every day I think of it.and wish I was back,
Well done. King Philips(metacom) war, One of the most deadly wars (per capita) in America and a turning point in native and English relationship would Be an interesting series. This chapter in history is widely overlooked.
I love how you make it a point to tell the audience that at the first encounter the British followed the natives Into the Woods, not because they were foolish, but to prove that they were not afraid. These men were in a strange place and trying to settle into it. They must have been very scared and yet very intrigued by what they were doing.
I'm actually weeping for their perseverance and determination to survive, for their cooperation, for their faith, etc. Calling someone a pilgrim is the highest of compliments.
Love your videos. My birthday is Thanksgiving and I am from Marshfield. I grew up elsewhere but later was graduated from Harvard. So I feel a connection to the Pilgrims. You have done well to show how lucky the Pilgrims were to land when they did. The devastating change from the vibrant native world Champlain saw to what the Pilgrims experienced is plain and tragic.
I've been to Provincetown many times and always wondered why the Pilgrims did not settle there -- I figured it was because of lack of fresh water. But this video adds so much detail to the story. Thanks.
Can I just say thank you sir. I’ve really enjoyed these couple videos regarding the mayflower. As someone who lives 20 mins away from Scrooby here in the north of England I was never aware of its importance in American history. I’m hoping to be able to find some reference to it in the local churches.
I grew up in Middleborough, Mass which is the area where my mother’s family settled between 1622-23. Our English predecessors are the Shiercliffe’s of England - Sheffield received its name from them.
Dear stranger, I regret to inform you: someone has misinformed you about the etymology of Sheffield, England. The origin of Sheffield has nothing to do with your Shiercliffe ancestors. The origin of the name Sheffield is the nearby river Sheaf (“Shef”) via the Anglo-Saxon shed where the letter d makes a -th sound ie Sheth, becomes Sheaf, becomes Sheff. Sheffield is already a named place in Domesday Book (ie after the Normans invade in 1066) but at that time had precisely zero inhabitants. (Everyone was dead.) Conversely, Shirecliffe is a place within “metro” Sheffield - Burngreave - but historically well outside of town. (So like, saying Brooklyn gets its name from Manhattan wouldn’t make any sense. They are merely nearby but have their own histories, and in different languages to boot.) Shirecliffe comes into named-existence much later, and for a long time was one hall (manor house) held by, among others, the Thwaites family. Some descendants of Thwaites coincidentally emigrated to colonial New England. I happen to have Thwaites ancestors in my family tree so I know this history. Separately, the etymology of Thwaites, and Feld, and the germanic name root Schier are all roughly the same: to clear, the clearing (of land), the felling (of trees); or, sometimes, clear as in pure. This may be a coincidence or may be indicative that different family names emerge from the same place and occupations over time, as the languages of the occupants/invaders change. In the case of Yorkshire that happened very many times: from Britonic languages, to Anglo/Saxon, to various versions of English, to Danish, to Norman-French etc. This is one of the most-conquered places in Europe, nevermind Britain. Lastly, the spelling Shier is either from southern England (Sussex: Shear, Shire) or a spelling morph of the Germanic Schier, which may be the same as the Yiddish name which is occupational (to teach the Talmud) as far as I know. Lastly, the suffix -Cliffe is about as English as it gets, and means what it sounds like, but also could be: coastline, shore, slope etc. This sort of makes sense as Sheffield is the confluence (or portage between) the ancient rivers Sheaf and Don; and Shirecliffe is right on the Don just north of town where a cleared forest slopes down to the river… Cheers,
It is so much more instructive to get this day-by-day diary of events. It really makes their trials and tribulations come alive. I don't know why, but I didn't realize that along with muskets, they would have had axes, saws and shovels... all common tools of that time. And, wow, what a stroke of luck (for them) that the natives had already cleared land... and buried stores of seed.... and then died off, leaving much behind.
Having grown up in Plymouth and surrounding towns, I learned a lot about the individual pilgrims but never learned about this. We have the recreated Mayflower here much of the year and I don’t believe they even mentioned this during my tours.
So strange! I was telling my son that I was standing on the tip of Cape Cod state park a couple years ago and I just kept feeling like there was something about this place. It was April and a beautiful sunset and windy and cold! The water was freezing and it felt very special! We had driven through the town of Plymouth and were going to see the the rock but didn't really feel like we wanted too. Not knowing what I know now!! ❤❤❤
Very Comprehensive. I never knew any of this. I feel for these people, suffering such poor conditions. I couldn't imagine what they were feeling as they ventured out with no social support, no know how, and obviously not a friendly welcome from the resident natives. Welcome to your new country.
I cannot help, but wonder how much the cleared fields, and the absence of native inhabitants played into the idea that it was divine providence that was giving this land to the European settlers. Perhaps the whole idea of manifest destiny has its origins in the mysterious, deserted towns, that, the now dead natives have left behind.
This is great. You should provide a link to part 1. It's not difficult to find, but it's helpful to viewers who happen along on this and haven't yet seen part 1.
This was very good, embarrassed to say I didn't know a lot of this info. My family would have Thanksgiving dinner at my aunt's house on 11 Howes Lane, and I remember certain seats at the dinner table could see the Mayflower, which I thought was the original. One of a few very good memories of my childhood in the 70s and 80s
45 year Massachusetts (or should I say Corruptachusetts these days) resident. Ive been to most of the places on Cape Cod and the south shore that you talk about my favorite being the outer cape and especially the path to Pilgrim Springs.
I am related to Alice (Carpenter) Southworth and William Bradford. Alice married William Bradford after her arrival in 1623 on the Anne. Very interesting. Thank you.
I have a dozen ancestors here,thank you for the well laid out story.
As a Cape Cod resident,these are my daily haunts..
Are those freshwater kettle ponds man made or natural. I worked summer of 85 in dennìsport and those ponds were great for swimming
@@danpatrick9080the kettle ponds are natural, formed at the end of the last Ice Age.
All of Cape Cod is a glacial moraine created by the edge of the ice sheet. As the glaciers retreated, some large blocks of ice were left behind and created depressions which became kettle ponds.
@jfinlay08 we are related. At least a dozen. John and Priscilla didn't know when to stop. They had the most children. Bradford and others were my wife's side. Several killed in King Philip's War. Party. Both Lexington and/or Concord, Bunker Hill, Long Island, crossing the Delaware. And so on. 😀😀😀😀
This is just so good, Jeffrey. As if the newspaper lands on your doorstep every day. Especially important is that the account doesn't shy away from describing the reality of locals living in what was to them a post-apocalyptic world - following a plague brought on by prior contact.
Thank you! That means a lot to me.
@@JeffreytheLibrarian You're doing great. Look forward to the next installment.
This is a nightmare for the natives who survived the plagues. Now albinos from the sea land like ghosts to steal their lands and rob from graves. In a way, it's like an echo of the sea peoples and the bronze age collapse. If this was a movie, I'd be rooting for the natives but knowing it's also their slow rolling Ragnarok.
That’s heavy thank you so true
Ze😮
@@JeffreytheLibrarianThank you. Jesus bless you
There is something so captivating about the way you tell this story. Please make part 3 as soon as possible!
I have it on the schedule. It takes a while to get it all together, but it will come.
I love your pace and attention to details, really clear delivery and enjoyable watch. Thank you!
Thank you!
Very nicely done! In 1979 I was stationed at Cape Cod Air Force Station (Pave Paws) just South of Plymouth on Sandwich, Mass's Flatrock Hill, a very high point on the Cape. From the roof of our 10-story radar building, you could see all the places from Provincetown to Chatham, Falmouth and Plymouth. I spent the next three years exploring all these areas, following the voyages as you described them. Wish I had your videos then!
Thank you for watching! That sounds like an awesome vantage point over the bay.
Pave Paws was updated and in use. The 1935 bridge over the canal is being replaced in an 11-year project w 2 parallel bridges.
@@1ambrose100 Thanks for the update. I left in December of 1982. I really hope to revisit the area someday. I loved being there!
@@1ambrose100 Thanks for the update. I left in December of 1982. I really hope to revisit the area someday. I loved being there!
That’s the Space Force base now.
Fascinating series of events. Excellent telling of them by you, Jeff. Thank you! They arrived pretty much at the worst possible moment, the onset of winter and its weather. Today, we forget the bone chilling cold of that rain and snow. And covering those distances on the water. Every minute surviving was an act of heroism for these people.
Yes, winter is the worst time to be there. It actually took the English a while to realize how cold it would get in New England. They figured that it would be mild, because it was a lower latitude than the British Isles, so they figured it would be warmer than Britain, but it turned out to be colder.
@@JeffreytheLibrarian This is probable, but many from Europe were already in this region prior to the pilgrims and one would think they knew that the winters here were far worse. They didn't intend to land on the Cape though, they intended to go much farther south.
Sitting here with my hot cocoa watching this, just pure heaven. Thank you
Thank you for watching!
I had some catching up to do on Jeff's videos. I love his style and the work he does for the graphics and to be as thorough and accurate as possible. I sit here with my morning coffee and think that this is what educational material is supposed to be like. Yum.
As a direct descendant of James Cole of Cole's Hill, I found this tremendously interesting. I had no prior knowledge of all that took place between the arrival at Provincetown and the eventual settlement at Plymouth. This is excellently done and I look forward to future videos.
Love this series! Next installment cant come soon enough!!!!
Much appreciated!
Fantastic visuals - made their arrival and first experiences so real rather than facts in a text book
Great job!
Thank you!
Once again, a fascinating and informative video.
I've said it before and will say it again. History teachers should be taking full advantage of your videos in the classroom today.
Thank you!
Never seen this story in so much detail! I hope you continue their story
Thanks for watching!
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Here in 2024 my UA-cam explorations found a new corn hill to feed my curious explorers mind. Absolutely outstanding and exciting telling. Thank you so much!
Thank you, friend!
Way back in the 60’s when I was taught about the Pilgrims our history books made little mention about the diseases introduced by earlier settlers had devastated the Indian populations just a couple of years before they arrived. In hindsight a very relevant part of the story. Your even tempo and clear pronunciation of words along with your use of maps make your videos easy to watch and follow along. Great channel. Thanks
For comparison, COVID 19 caused over a quarter million deaths in 2020 in US becoming the 3rd leading cause of death that year. About 350,000 people died that year
I appreciate your kind comments! Thank you for watching!
Oh this is the best, exactly what I was looking for! Thank you!
Thank you!
Love the first hand accounts and the effort for contextual historical accuracy
Thank you for watching!
I am 42 and in my youth history used to be boring because my teachers never knew stuff like this and I was the kid that asked to many questions.This is the exact stuff ive always needed..thank you
Thank you! We are the same age.
⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ UA-cam technology at its best. Entertainment. Education. Individual creativity at its finest!
Thank you, friend!
Enjoyed that! Both of my GGGGGGGGGG- grand fathers, William White and Degory Priest, Died that winter and spring of '21. Their families, some how survived. Thanks for the well done history lesson.
Thank you for watching!
Excellent! Thanks for the details that we never get in school.👍
School was a joke. I learned way more on my own after.
@@Gryper-c3s 💯
Thank you for watching!
Really hope there’re plans for a part three. These videos are great.
I plan on going and going!
Thank you for the very detailed day by day account of the Pilgrims as they explored Cape Cod . We sit in our warm homes enjoying your excellent narration thinking about what Cold and discomfort these men and women had to endure, brave and enduring soles indeed.
Thank you for watching!
Great video, thank you. You go into so much more details than I've ever been able to learn before 😊
Thank you for watching!
Love the animations. Thank u Jeffrey
Thank you, friend!
Just got back from from a nine-day vacation in Provincetown, and now devouring this kind of info. Thanks.
Thank you so much for this information. I’m so grateful for these courageous people. We’re related to William Bradford; my brother lived in East Dennis and recently passed away. I’m overwhelmed with appreciation, having spent many summers on the Cape.
i loved this more than any recreation. i don't know why, just plain awesome.
Thank you, friend!
Fascinating. I didn't know any of the Cape Cod history of the pilgrims. I'm in New Hampshire native who spent summers on Cape Cod at my grandfather's house.
I greatly enjoy many of your videos but this was my favorite yet. The hardships the pilgrims went through make for an excellent story…. A story I ignorantly knew little about until watching this splendid video. Cheers 🍻
Thank you so much, that really means a lot to me!
It means a lot that you use your time to make educational videos that are simultaneously entertaining. Thanks again
I listened to EVERY SINGLE WORD. Been to the cape 38 times I love it there AWESOME
Thank you for watching! New England is beautiful.
As an 11th great-grandson of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins, my understanding of the Mayflower colonization was always vague. Turkeys, corn, Plymouth Rock, pilgrims having Thanksgiving with the Indians - a great big jumble. Thank you for such an enlightening account - as well as the graphics! 👍🏻
Thank you! I great appreciate it!
I read "The Courtship of Miles Standish" twice a year. And I cry every time! Priscilla and John 🥰
being from Plymouth County, MA in a small town called way back then Little Comfort" it eventuallu became Whitman MA and a leather goods manufacturing region. It was the best town and I miss it every day I think of it.and wish I was back,
I tried moving to Arkansas and Oklahoma, came home after a few years. There's something about it here, it holds you forever. Whitman is doing fine 😸
Well done.
King Philips(metacom) war, One of the most deadly wars (per capita) in America and a turning point in native and English relationship would
Be an interesting series.
This chapter in history is widely overlooked.
I would LOVE a series on King Phillips War
I love how you make it a point to tell the audience that at the first encounter the British followed the natives Into the Woods, not because they were foolish, but to prove that they were not afraid.
These men were in a strange place and trying to settle into it. They must have been very scared and yet very intrigued by what they were doing.
I'm actually weeping for their perseverance and determination to survive, for their cooperation, for their faith, etc. Calling someone a pilgrim is the highest of compliments.
They certainly had many challenges, but they stuck it out.
Yeah but they were also weirdo’s
Compared to nowdays who isn't a weirdo?
Excellent work and very engaging…. You’re nailing American history
Thank you!
Beautifully done and excellent narration. Enjoying the series so far immensely!
Thank you!
oh awesome. I've been waiting for this for months
It takes a while to get them put together, but the final product makes it worthwhile.
Wow, I like how clear and engaging your storytelling is
Thank you!
Thank you, Jeffrey!
Thank you for watching!
The little boat rocking and wave animations go so hard🔥
I like the bobbing boats too. I am experimenting with 3d animation. I know it looks Windows 95 right now, but I will slowly build my skills.
@@JeffreytheLibrariani honestly kind of enjoy the old timey animation… something nostalgic to it
I have never been so interested in this topic before... very well made video that was easy to follow!
Great videos on the Plymouth settlement. A great book on this is "they knew they were pilgrims"
Thank you for the book recommendation!
I found this very informative and educational! I had no idea that the pilgrims actually made landfall on the Cape!
They had a lot of exploring to do before they found a suitable place.
Appreciate your commentary. As a direct descendent of Myles Standish, this was interesting.
If slightly "white-washed" 😁
Watched pt 1 & pt 2; fascinating! Well done and thank you for sharing these with us.
Thank you for watching! More to come in the future!
Great, as usual. Thank you, Jeffrey!
Much appreciated!
They enjoyed water and beer on the Mayflower. Oh how wonderful.
I'm glad they got a day to relax. It would be so hard to live then.
Beer was safer to drink than most sources of water. Don’t assume it was a party ship, it was a necessity.
On Christmas Day!
Thank you. This was an excellent presentation of history I didn't know. 💯
Thank you for watching!
These videos always hit different when you've visited most of the places mentioned several times.
The graphics dept deserves a raise!
Thank you for the nice comments. I am doing some experiments with 3D. I have at least reached a Windows 95 level of 3D animation.
Fantastic content sir
I appreciate it!
Love your videos. My birthday is Thanksgiving and I am from Marshfield. I grew up elsewhere but later was graduated from Harvard. So I feel a connection to the Pilgrims.
You have done well to show how lucky the Pilgrims were to land when they did. The devastating change from the vibrant native world Champlain saw to what the Pilgrims experienced is plain and tragic.
That's so neat that you have connections like that with the Pilgrims. Thank you for watching!
Fantastic video with great detail! Can’t wait for the next part.
Thanks for watching!
Jeffery's use of visuals & maps make his videos so good for learniing.
Thank you!
A lot of times I am only listening while cooking, so appreciate that you announce where you are on the map- helps me visualize it.
I've been to Provincetown many times and always wondered why the Pilgrims did not settle there -- I figured it was because of lack of fresh water. But this video adds so much detail to the story. Thanks.
Yes, the Pilgrims had to find a place with freshwater. I wonder if they also felt the Provincetown area was too hemmed in, and not defensible.
Sid Meier's Colonization is my favorite game until this day. History of those times is very interesting for me.
I have played that game too. I was always good at making a really neat colony, and then I would get crushed after I declared independence.
@@JeffreytheLibrarian please hurry up with the 3rd part don't take months, this is so good.
Miles Standish has a monument in my town 🥰
Exceptionally done.
Can't wait to see what else you have done.
Thank you! More to come!
@@JeffreytheLibrarian
Heck, I'm still working on your old stuff, but that's good to know.
Nice work.
Can I just say thank you sir. I’ve really enjoyed these couple videos regarding the mayflower. As someone who lives 20 mins away from Scrooby here in the north of England I was never aware of its importance in American history. I’m hoping to be able to find some reference to it in the local churches.
Thank you, friend!
I grew up in Middleborough, Mass which is the area where my mother’s family settled between 1622-23. Our English predecessors are the Shiercliffe’s of England - Sheffield received its name from them.
Dear stranger,
I regret to inform you: someone has misinformed you about the etymology of Sheffield, England.
The origin of Sheffield has nothing to do with your Shiercliffe ancestors. The origin of the name Sheffield is the nearby river Sheaf (“Shef”) via the Anglo-Saxon shed where the letter d makes a -th sound ie Sheth, becomes Sheaf, becomes Sheff.
Sheffield is already a named place in Domesday Book (ie after the Normans invade in 1066) but at that time had precisely zero inhabitants. (Everyone was dead.) Conversely, Shirecliffe is a place within “metro” Sheffield - Burngreave - but historically well outside of town. (So like, saying Brooklyn gets its name from Manhattan wouldn’t make any sense. They are merely nearby but have their own histories, and in different languages to boot.) Shirecliffe comes into named-existence much later, and for a long time was one hall (manor house) held by, among others, the Thwaites family. Some descendants of Thwaites coincidentally emigrated to colonial New England. I happen to have Thwaites ancestors in my family tree so I know this history.
Separately, the etymology of Thwaites, and Feld, and the germanic name root Schier are all roughly the same: to clear, the clearing (of land), the felling (of trees); or, sometimes, clear as in pure. This may be a coincidence or may be indicative that different family names emerge from the same place and occupations over time, as the languages of the occupants/invaders change. In the case of Yorkshire that happened very many times: from Britonic languages, to Anglo/Saxon, to various versions of English, to Danish, to Norman-French etc. This is one of the most-conquered places in Europe, nevermind Britain.
Lastly, the spelling Shier is either from southern England (Sussex: Shear, Shire) or a spelling morph of the Germanic Schier, which may be the same as the Yiddish name which is occupational (to teach the Talmud) as far as I know. Lastly, the suffix -Cliffe is about as English as it gets, and means what it sounds like, but also could be: coastline, shore, slope etc. This sort of makes sense as Sheffield is the confluence (or portage between) the ancient rivers Sheaf and Don; and Shirecliffe is right on the Don just north of town where a cleared forest slopes down to the river…
Cheers,
Thanks!
Thank you! Much appreciated!
What an entertaining achievement! Well done Jeffrey.
Thank you! I am working on Part Three now.
8:49 very interesting and neat that they were thoughtful to respect what they perceive to be graves.
I think some of them felt like they were being watched (and they were), and many definitely believed in a universal code for the respect of the dead.
I love your videos. Thank you.
Thanks so much!
Thank you for posting this. Very enjoyable.
Thomas Rodgers was our descendent from the Mayflower . He died that winter leaving his son alone. Trying to find the family who took him in.
Love the little animations. They really add to the story being told!
Thank you! I am experimenting with 3d, so I will try to refine it as I go.
This is such an awesome video. Your animations compared with the pictures and tracking the journey, it’s so great. Subscribed
Thank you!
Wonderfully done! So interesting to follow the daily activities
Yea this was a great listen 👍
Thank you!
It is so much more instructive to get this day-by-day diary of events. It really makes their trials and tribulations come alive. I don't know why, but I didn't realize that along with muskets, they would have had axes, saws and shovels... all common tools of that time. And, wow, what a stroke of luck (for them) that the natives had already cleared land... and buried stores of seed.... and then died off, leaving much behind.
The pilgrims definitely came ready. They definitely got lucky to find Plymouth Harbor.
Some would say that it was God's Providence. I happened to believe that too.
Great video, can’t wait for the next one!!
I am working on Civil War stuff now, but I will return to Plymouth in the future.
Fantastic job of telling the story.👍👍
Thank you!
Having grown up in Plymouth and surrounding towns, I learned a lot about the individual pilgrims but never learned about this. We have the recreated Mayflower here much of the year and I don’t believe they even mentioned this during my tours.
So strange! I was telling my son that I was standing on the tip of Cape Cod state park a couple years ago and I just kept feeling like there was something about this place. It was April and a beautiful sunset and windy and cold! The water was freezing and it felt very special! We had driven through the town of Plymouth and were going to see the the rock but didn't really feel like we wanted too. Not knowing what I know now!! ❤❤❤
Very Comprehensive. I never knew any of this. I feel for these people, suffering such poor conditions. I couldn't imagine what they were feeling as they ventured out with no social support, no know how, and obviously not a friendly welcome from the resident natives. Welcome to your new country.
Thank you for watching!
I was a little kid in Welfleet. Dad in USAF. I can understand the need for a stop to get beer in Cape Cod 🍻
This was outstanding.
Excellent historical and detailed video.
Thank you!
Been to Cornhill Beach every summer since I was a kid and my fave Race Point 😊
Thank you very much this is wonderful
I appreciate it!
I cannot help, but wonder how much the cleared fields, and the absence of native inhabitants played into the idea that it was divine providence that was giving this land to the European settlers. Perhaps the whole idea of manifest destiny has its origins in the mysterious, deserted towns, that, the now dead natives have left behind.
This is great. You should provide a link to part 1. It's not difficult to find, but it's helpful to viewers who happen along on this and haven't yet seen part 1.
Yes, I need to embrace the in-video link stamps. It takes me a while to adapt to these things.
This was very good, embarrassed to say I didn't know a lot of this info. My family would have Thanksgiving dinner at my aunt's house on 11 Howes Lane, and I remember certain seats at the dinner table could see the Mayflower, which I thought was the original. One of a few very good memories of my childhood in the 70s and 80s
I subscribed and am looking forward to checking out the rest of your catalog, thank
45 year Massachusetts (or should I say Corruptachusetts these days) resident. Ive been to most of the places on Cape Cod and the south shore that you talk about my favorite being the outer cape and especially the path to Pilgrim Springs.
Lots of folks wish they could live there. Beautiful landscape!
I am related to Alice (Carpenter) Southworth and William Bradford. Alice married William Bradford after her arrival in 1623 on the Anne. Very interesting. Thank you.
Thank you for watching!
Really Excellent! Thank you so much!
thanks for watching!
This was great! I’m still waiting on Part 3 about the actual settlement.
Thank you! I am going back to the Civil War but then I will get back to Plymouth.
Riveting! Thank you. 👍🏻🇺🇸
Thank you for watching!
excellent account. I portray history in costume. I found this most helpful
Thank you for watching!
👏👏well done, very interesting
Thank you!
Those are some impressive graphics from 1982
Try 1992. You would need at least Windows 3.1 to do that.
Great stuff, love the upgraded graphics
Thank you! I have achieved a Windows 95 level animation level that can only get more polished as time goes by.
There was no
22:42 New Brunswick until 1783 it was
Nova Scotia then .
I had at least 3 school field trips to Plymouth Plantation. I dont know how they survived the winters in those tiny cottages
Very Interesting and nicely narrated!
thank you!
I live in Weymouth, Ma. I hope you continue this series and cover Standish and others meeting with Indigenous men here in Weymouth.
I will keep going. It takes a while to get the production together, but it will come.
As always, fantastic.
Thank you!
Love this Mayflower series!
I enjoy making it. More to come.
Seems like they could just walk ashore across that lego ocean. Haha.
Yeah, they do look like Lego guys.