Preview

The Mayflower Compact

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
292 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Mayflower Compact
Three hundred and ninety-one years ago the Virginia Company of London gave a patent for a settlement to some London merchants headed by Thomas Weston. Over twenty-four families were sent over to America on a small, leaky ship, called The Mayflower. These colonists promised to send lumbers, furs, and fish back to the Weston for seven years. After these seven years, they would own the tract. The leaders of the expedition and half the members were Separatist Puritans that had withdrawn from the Church of England. In November of 1620, this ship landed at Plymouth bay in present-day Massachusetts. They had no legal right to be there, thus the leaders had all the adult males in the group sign a document known as the Mayflower Compact. This document constituted themselves as a “civil body politic” or government, thus establishing the Plymouth colony.
The Mayflower Compact is commonly referred to as the beginning of American democracy and one the foundations of the US Constitution. The people of the expedition came together and agreed in a written document, rules that would govern their community as they began their new lives in America. It determined the distribution of authority and governed by fair laws. The Compact showed the equality of all in the group and allowed everyone to vote on decisions and be the source of the power locally. This type of government had already existed in Virginia, so the Pilgrims were not the first to use a democratic style of government in the new world, but they were one of the first groups to use this government and had a written document to go by. These occurrences influenced the American government today, as well as in the years to

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    When thinking about the name Mayflower it usually brings images of people in big hats and buckled shoes having Thanksgiving with some Indians; evoking memories of your history classes in elementary school. This isn’t the whole truth as Nathaniel Philbrick goes in deeper to what the relationship between the Pilgrims and Natives were really like. In the 1620s, English Puritans left England to the New World for the desire to seek religious freedom. They were a group of people unaware what will greet them across the vast, open ocean; taking their chances knowing the journey would prove both costly and frustrating. The English puritans arrived in Cape Cod after being blown north of their intended course, many people had gotten the plague due to close living conditions and low food supply on the ship.…

    • 1375 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In 1620, a ship called the Mayflower arrived off Cape Cod on the Massachusetts coast. The Mayflower was blown north of its course, the ship landed at a site that had been named Plymouth. Aboard the Mayflower signed an agreement called the Mayflower Compact. In it, they vowed to obey laws agreed upon for the good of the colony. The Mayflower Compact establish the idea of self-government and majority rule.…

    • 70 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    When the pilgrims came to New England they set out for their own religious freedom, even though they didn’t always believe other religions had the right to do so as well. In England the puritans, both separatists and non-separatists, were harshly treated by the theocratic government (government controlled by religious aspects). The puritans were locked up or even killed for disobeying the church and government. In the 1620s, puritans in England heard about the Plymouth colony of separatists and wanted something similar. The Massachusetts Bay Company was an organized group of adventurers and puritans that were set for going to New England greatly for economic interests. The company received a charter from the king that allowed them to leave England to set up a colony in the new world. At the time the king didn’t know they were puritans or he may have not allowed the charter to be issued. The puritans in the company sought this venture to be a chance to create a perfect Christian society of their own. In 1630, 1,000 people (including families) sailed over headed by John Winthrop, an influential leader of the expedition. Winthrop was later to be an elected leader year after year in the colony. In the port of Boston was where the central colony started. The colony was greatly influenced by…

    • 1050 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Mayflower Compact was the principle ideal of the Pilgrims and was also the government set type for them and future generations. The Compact was written on the ship named Mayflower, hence the name Mayflower Compact, and all of the people aboard were bound to it. Furthermore, it was only the second government system to be established by the Europeans in North America, with only Jamestown being established beforehand. As a result of this, the Mayflower Compact has a big significance in American History, because it established a government where religion was not a central factor in it.…

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    From the time each ship set off from England, both the New England and Chesapeake colonies were bound to be different. In the Chesapeake region, where Jamestown was founded, the people had unrealistic expectations. They hoped that gold would be plentiful and easy to find, while also expecting the Native Americans to bow to their wishes. Contrary to their wishes, there was no gold to be found, and the Native Americans became less pleasant as the English became lazier. Believing that they were superior to the Native Americans, the English refused to grow crops, and expected the Native Americans to supply it all, creating rising tensions among them. On the opposite view, the settlers of the New England region had no such hopes. They set out from England to practice their religion more freely. John Winthrop had this idea of a “City on a hill” believing that the people of New England should show England itself how they should live, surrounded by their religion. In fact, upon arriving in New England, the puritans made their Mayflower Compact which allowed them to create their own government. Coming from this compact, the puritans also created the Covenant of Grace, which was to live scandal free and prove scriptural knowledge, and the Social Covenant, which was amongst the people, requiring a mutual watchfulness and no privacy. Unlike the Chesapeake colonies, the New England colonies also came with a family basis, while the…

    • 863 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pros And Cons Of Quebec

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages

    They settled in Plymouth and wrote the Mayflower Compact as a set of laws to govern themselves. However, Plymouth never became very successful. The Puritans, who founded Massachusetts, were reformers of the Anglican Church as well, but not complete separatists. Under John Winthrop, they wanted their community to set an example for the Church. Connecticut was also founded after settlers defeated the Pequot tribe in a bloody war and created a government known as the Fundamental Orders. Roger Williams founded Rhode Island as a colony of religious tolerance, which filled up with refugees. As for everyday life, New England settlers lived in towns, rather than on tobacco…

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    AP History Assignment 2

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages

    2) The Mayflower compact and New England town meetings contributed to democratic governments in the colonies through open-town meetings. It allowed the adult male settlers to form their own self-government where everyone could share their thought processes.…

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Pilgrims of Leiden, Holland were separatist (those who separated from The Church of England) who came to America in search of "a better life."…

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At that time, Virginia was from Jamestown to the mouth of the Hudson River, so they traveled to present-day New York. There they hoped to live under the English government, but be able to have a free religion. Founded by a group of Separatists at first known as the Brownist Emigration and Anglicans, who later on became known as the Pilgrims, the Plymouth Colony was one of the most successful colonies. Sadly, they did not have the money to start their own village. The pilgrims were desperate. They entered an agreement with financial investors. The company of investors would allow the colonists to sail to North America and give them much-needed supplies. To pay back, the colonists would have to work for the company and send resources back to England. All assets, including the land and the Pilgrims’ houses, would belong to the company until the end of seven years. After that, all of the assets would be divided among each of the investors and colonists. The colonists and investors had many quarrels amongst each other, but eventually the Pilgrims were able to leave Europe to go to…

    • 1249 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    JR-102C

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The colonization of the New World was first an attempt to conquer uncharted land, discover new unique crops, and collect riches such as rare minerals like gold. Some of the first contacts weren’t great, most starved, some even died. They needed help, therefore, the fragile pilgrims of what was left of the colony sent for help. The colonials sailed on the ship which took them many months just to get back to Europe, and it would take even longer for these colonials to return back to the New World. They explained to the Virginia Company that they were determined to go so that they may “live and die as English men and women” and they were sick and tired of the dutchification of their children. As these colonists sailed the Mayflower, by their peppery and stocky Captain Myles Standish they lost track of where they were headed and landed many miles north of Jamestown at Plymouth Bay. After arriving in this unknown, unpopulated area, a group of separatist created the Massachusetts Bay Company. This was the beginning of the Massachusetts Bay colony.…

    • 581 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Mayflower was a ship headed for the Virginia colony but due to natural events that occurred, it was blown off course too far north. It landed in Provincetown Massachusetts. London Company authorized the voyage of the Mayflower but didn’t give permission for them to settle that far north. The settlers signed a compact, The Mayflower Compact, which would be governed by majority rule.…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Mayflower Compact

    • 349 Words
    • 2 Pages

    2. The events that forced the passengers to create and sign the Mayflower Compact were that they realized that they needed a temporary government because they were isolated in America and only an established government can come from themselves. Pilgrims and the “strangers” had an argument that the rules and regulations from the Virginia Company no longer applied to them.…

    • 349 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jamestown Dbq

    • 1112 Words
    • 5 Pages

    These people were the Pilgrims. The Pilgrims formed an agreement before setting foot in America called the “Mayflower Compact.” This accord became the foundation for the Pilgrims’ eventual success and impact on the future of the colonies. Like Jamestown, the colony of Plymouth was ravaged by death in the early months of its founding. Why? One difference between their plights, however, situations, though, was the time of year in which they arrived in the New World. that Tthe men of Jamestown had arrived in the summer and had to strugglebear with working in the the heat during their work, while the Pilgrims were tortured suffered the hardship ofby the frosts of winter. upon their arrival. The Pilgrims, despite their early misfortunes, managed to establish a colony that sought to give glory to God in their…

    • 1112 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    It was important for the colonists to sign the Mayflower compact. The Mayflower Compact, according to White (2012), was ¨a legal contract in which they agreed to have fair laws to protect the general good.¨ It was essential because the pilgrims needed laws and rules to form a good government and colony. The leaders knew that people would be people, which means they would naturally rebel if not held to laws and the punishments that came with the laws. While many people of the colonies wanted to leave government behind, the leaders knew it was a necessary evil, and therefore made sure the compact was signed and fair.…

    • 108 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Since the Reformation occurred in England, Pilgrims believed that the Church of England was so impure that the true believers should separate themselves completely from it. They established a colony in Plymouth, which is present day Massachusetts. The religion established by the Pilgrims was Christianity and to the present day, Christianity is the main religion of North America. Since 1620, to the present day, the Natives have continued to practice their own religion. We know that the Natives had no influence on the religion over the last hundreds of years. The pilgrims set up the first type of majority government called the Mayflower Compact. This meant that only people who owned land had a say in the government and the running of the colony. This means any Natives and Africans had no say in decision making so they could not change or establish any rules to suit their culture or identity. When the pilgrims came over to the New World they established English as the official language. To the present day, English is the language spoken in North…

    • 851 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays