Mayflower was the name of the ship on which the Pilgrims sailed to America. Plymouth Rock was the name of the rock on which they landed.
The mayflower...
I believe its "Quakers"
In their 1620 voyage from England to the New World, the pilgrim-settlers intent on beginning a new life in America sailed on a ship by the name of "Mayflower". Although aged and worn, the small ship managed to make the difficult passage across the Atlantic, landing some hundred passengers onto what would become known as Massachusetts in November of 1620. The Mayflower was the first ship to carry 102 Pilgrims to America. Many other ships followed. Prior to Jamestown was the failed Colony on Roanoke Island, North Carolina, where the first white child on American soil was born (Virginia Dare, b. 18 August 1587) and the voyage of Christopher Columbus in 1492, and likely Leif Erickson's explorations before that.
The Pilgrims started a colony named Plymoth Rock in Massachusetts.
Mayflower
The Mayflower
The Mayflower was the name of the ship that the Pilgrims sailed on. The Ship, before the Pilgrims' Voyage, was used predominantly as a cargo ship.
pinta and santa maria
the Mayflower
the Mayflower
The Mayflower
the pilgrims
The mayflower carried the pilgrims from England to North America.
Yes.Mayflower is a proper noun (The name of the ship Pilgrims sailed to America on) As well as Plymouth (The place the Pilgrims supposedly landed.)
The Mayflower and the Speedwell were the ships the first Pilgrims sailed on. Both set sail for the New World on August 15, 1620, but were forced back twice due to dangerous leaks on the Speedwell. The Speedwell's passengers regrouped on the Mayflower, and on September 16th, the voyage began, a month behind schedule. The Mayflower landed near what is now Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1620.
he commanded many ships but sailed on gabriel as far as i know
The Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria.
niña, pinta, santa maria