History of the Pilgrims and Puritans, their ancestry and descendants; basis of Americanization (1922) (14597106698)
Summary
Identifier: historyofpilgrim01sawy (find matches)
Title: History of the Pilgrims and Puritans, their ancestry and descendants; basis of Americanization
Year: 1922 (1920s)
Authors: Sawyer, Joseph Dillaway, b. 1849 Griffis, William Elliot, 1843-1928
Subjects: Pilgrims (New Plymouth Colony) Puritans Massachusetts -- History Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775
Publisher: New York, Century History Co
Contributing Library: New York Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MSN
Text Appearing Before Image:
E a:-h6n£er* of- christian- civilization • m -amebica W)IJWDERvOF-THE-DirrCHCOIONTATS¥ftANENDAEL • DEIAMRE U • S • A T^^t^ltTHKlLANBS • SOCIETY OF • PlILABIXFHIAHEARSTHISMEMORIALER Copyrighted by J. and R. Lamb. TABLET IN TOWN HALL OF ZIERIKZEE IN HONOR OF THE FOUNDING OF THEDUTCH COLONY AT SWANNENDAEL, DELAWARE. later all the Arminians returned, and had freedom of wor-ship and propaganda. In the reign of Queen Wilhelmina, she being the firstsubscriber, a testimonial of honor to Barneveldt, as one ofthe greatest statesmen of the Republic and of modernEurope, was reared in the Grand Pensionarys birthplace, inaddition to the tablet in the Binnenhof at the Hague. The Pilgrims were keenly interested in the doings offour British Devonshire sailor men, Drake, Gilbert, Haw- 192 HISTORY OF THE PILGRIMS AND PURITANS kins, and Frobisher. While the Dutch guarded the Pilgrimships against the Dunkirk pirates of the channel, theseAdmirals brought the Spanish navy to its knees and made
Text Appearing After Image:
THESE FOUR SAILOR WARRIORS, DRAKE, GIL-BERT, HAWKINS, AND FROBISHER, WERE INTRUTH AN ADVANCE GUARD. h^ifi^^\ it safe for Pilgrims and Puritans to settle in America farfrom their home base. For over one hundred years after Spaniards had wal-lowed in the gold and silver of Peru and Mexico, all thedesert, everglade, mountain, and rock-bound coast to the THE SEPARATISTS IN HOLLAND 193 north lay a mocking wilderness, until Jamestown and Plym-outh pioneers developed the land. Aside from feeble life-fluttering in Florida, whereFrench Huguenot flames were stamped to death by Span- ^^f^^H