Sunday, December 13, 2020

The Truth About That Rock, Plymouth Rock-- Part 1

From the "Mayflower: Birth of America."

The Pilgrims may or may not have stepped on this granite boulder when they came ashore at Plymouth, but the legend is far more important than the reality.

The Pilgrims most likely noticed this rock when they came ashore at Plymouth in 1620 because it was like no other rock anywhere around that site.  Geologists call it a glacial erratic -- a glacially deposited rock differing in size and type from rocks native to the region.

In other words, it was like the Pilgrims, from somewhere else.

There is, however, no mention of the stone in William Bradford's firsthand accounts of the colony's founding.  It wasn't until 1741 that the rock was identified as the spot where the Pilgrims first stepped ashore.   That is 121 years later.

And, that assertion was made by 94-year-old Thomas Faunce, who said he'd been told of the rock's significance by his father, a Plymouth Colony settler who had arrived in 1623 and by several of the original Mayflower passengers.

Whether he was being truthful, we can not know.

--Brock-Perry


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