Plymouth Colony

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Words related to Plymouth Colony

colony formed by the Pilgrims when they arrived at Plymouth Rock in 1620

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
The next day we spent quite a bit of time at Plimouth Plantation, soaking in the history re-created there.
Use the Peace Doves to disarm one of the eight countries possessing nuclear weapons http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/peace/nuclear_ weapons/index.html Plimouth Plantation Presents information on aspects of Thanksgiving in an entertaining way http://www.plimoth.org/education/olc/index_js2.html# Real Lives Highlights economic, social and health problems people face world-wide http://www.educationalsimulations.com/products.html Spanish Spanish-English Cycle Race Practice in basic skills using Spanish http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/adventure/ spanish1.htm Spanish Education Games Practice in basic skills using Spanish http://www.apples4theteacher.com/foreignlang.
AGA Medical Corporation, Plimouth, Minnesota, has received U.S.
But Carver and the others survived, eking out a new existence in a settlement they called Plimouth, on the fertile east coast of the great new continent.
Down the road there is a graphic reminder of the way things were at the recreated Pilgrim village of Plimouth Plantation, which not only uses the original spelling of the name but also brings to life the basic conditions they experienced.
For example, tourists can explore 19th century industrial villages in England; sit in a trench or air raid shelter in London's Imperial War Museum, or witness how New England colonists lived by touring Plimouth Plantation.
According to the Plimouth Plantation, a living history museum in Massachusetts, the only known record of the food eaten that day among the Pilgrims and the Wampanoags, the original Americans, puts seasonal wild fowl - including turkeys, ducks and geese - and venison brought by the Wampanoag on the table.
(8) Pild-Garlicke, with his disheveled appearance, 'Plimouth horse', and 'stooles', bodies forth the stereotypically undisciplined English vagabond who resides on the social margins, allowing Westminster the author to point to ways in which marginal, incontinent individuals are highly susceptible to pathogens entering through their corporeal openings (A4v,Dr).
Led by the exiled Clyfton and the prominent separatist John Robinson, a parish minister from nearby Norfolk who assumed the role of teaching pastor, the separatists drew up a covenant, as Bradford recorded in his Plimouth Plantation account, "and as the Lord's free people .
She has worked in the field of public history for over twenty years, including the Norlands Living History Center, Colonial Williamsburg, Plimouth Plantation, Elderhostel, the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, and the Weaving Women's Words Project of the Jewish Women's Archive.
The General Laws and Liberties of New Plimouth [sic] Colony, enacted in 1671, provides: That no Man be Sentenced to Death without Testimonies of two witnesses at least, or that which is equivalent thereunto, and that two or three Witnesses, being of competent Age, Understanding and of good Reputation, Testifying to the case in question, shall be accounted and accepted as full Testimony in any case, though they did not together see or hear, and so Witness to the same individual Act, in reference to circumstances of time and place; Provided the Bench and Jury be satisfied with such Testimony.
Worthen ("Reconstructing the Globe: Constructing Ourselves"), in discussing the different ways various historical reconstructions from Disney World to Colonial Williamsburg construct the visitor and commodify experience, points out that plays at the New Globe are not performances of performances (like the performance of actual work by pilgrim-impersonators at Plimouth Plantation, for instance) but rather (and perhaps unavoidably) contemporary engagements by contemporary means with the Shakespearean text.