Frequently Asked Questions
How do I join the Mayflower Society?
Please visit the Mayflower Society's web page
for more information. MayflowerHistory.com is not directly affiliated with
any society or group, so cannot provide membership information or access society
records.
Is the Mayflower passenger list complete?
Yes. Mayflower passenger and Plymouth Colony governor William
Bradford wrote a passenger list, so we know exactly who was on the ship.
His passenger list can be validated with other contemporary documents as well,
including the signers of the Mayflower Compact, and the individuals named in the
1623 Division of Land.
What ship did my ancestor come on then?
In most cases, the ships your ancestors came on have not been preserved in the
historical record. There was no law that required passenger lists to be
kept and maintained, and as a result almost none survive. The main sources
for most passenger lists are English records (of which there are not many), or
journals (of which there are not many). Sometimes land and court records
can help you determine what ship your ancestor came on, or at least narrow their
arrival time down.
Was there a "second sailing" of the Mayflower?
There were several ships named the Mayflower that made trips to America
in the 1600s and 1700s. None have surviving passenger lists. None
were the same ship that brought the Pilgrims--it went back into the wine trade
for a couple voyages before being decommissioned and scrapped in 1624.
Can you tell me if I am a Mayflower
descendant, or do you know anything more about my lineage?
No, I really can't tell you much more. A genealogy "how-to" book can be
purchased from most bookstores or checked out from a library. By some
estimates there are more than 25 million living descendants of at least one
Mayflower passenger. There is no way for anybody to trace them all
down, and there is no "magic book" at the Library of Congress will tell you your
ancestry.
Can I link to your web site? Will you link to
my web site?
You may link to any page of MayflowerHistory.com. MayflowerHistory.com
does not participate in "link exchanges," and very rarely links to off-site
material unless it is a recognized institution providing unique and highly
relevant information.
Why are some dates on your web site 10 days
different than what is in the encyclopedia? Why are some dates
"double-dated"?
In the 17th century, England used the Julian calendar; in 1752 England switched
to the Gregorian calendar (the one we use today). There is a ten-day
difference between the two calendars during this time period. Dates on
this web site are displayed as Julian dates; encyclopedias may choose to
"modernize" the dates to the Gregorian calendar by adding 10 days. Also,
the Julian calendar flipped the year on March 25, not on January 1.
Therefore some dates are written like 26 February 1610/11, to indicate it was
still 1610 on the Julian calendar, but the year was actually 1611 by our modern
calendar.
Why is that person's name spelled differently than
it is in my records? Why is that word spelled so strangely?
The English dictionary was not "invented" until the 1750s, more than a hundred
years after the Pilgrims came to America. People in the 17th century did
not pay particular attention to spelling, and without an official dictionary
there was no "wrong" way to spell anything. Many people could not write at
all, and so could care less how other people spelled their names in the official
records. One of my ancestors had his name spelled 7 different ways in the
same document--and none of them match the way it was spelled on his gravestone.
People really did not care if it was "Winslow" or "Wynslow"; "Soul" or "Sowle"
or "Soule"; "Doty" or "Dotten" or "Doughtie"; "Miles" or "Myles"; etc.
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