. The May-flower and her log, July 15, 1620-May 6, 1621 : chiefly from original sources . rt, no other use or value. They consisted largely ofknives, bracelets (bead and metal), rings, scissors, copperchains, beads, blue and red trading cloth, cheap (glass)jewels (for the ears, etc.), small mirrors, clothing (e. g. red-cotton horsemans .coats — laced, jerkins, blankets,etc.), shoes, strong waters, pipes, tobacco, tools and hard-ware (hatchets, nails, hoes, fish-hooks, etc.), rugs, twine, nets,etc., etc. A fragment of one of the heavy hoes of the an-cient pattern — found on the site of the Pilg
. The May-flower and her log, July 15, 1620-May 6, 1621 : chiefly from original sources . rt, no other use or value. They consisted largely ofknives, bracelets (bead and metal), rings, scissors, copperchains, beads, blue and red trading cloth, cheap (glass)jewels (for the ears, etc.), small mirrors, clothing (e. g. red-cotton horsemans .coats — laced, jerkins, blankets,etc.), shoes, strong waters, pipes, tobacco, tools and hard-ware (hatchets, nails, hoes, fish-hooks, etc.), rugs, twine, nets,etc., etc. A fragment of one of the heavy hoes of the an-cient pattern — found on the site of the Pilgrim trading-house at Manomet — is owned by the Pilgrim Society,and speaks volumes of the labor performed by the Pilgrims,before they had ploughs and draught-cattle, in the raising oftheir wonderful crops of corn. Such was the May-Flowers burden, animate and inani-mate, when — the last passenger and the last piece of freighttransferred from the Speedwell — her anchor hove short,she swung with the tide in Plymouth roadstead, ready todepart at last for the Virginia
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectpilgrim, bookyear1901