William Bradford's firsthand chronicle of the founding and early years of Plymouth Colony, written between 1630 and 1651.
Of Plymouth Plantation stands as one of the central documentary sources of early American history. Composed by William Bradford, long-serving governor of Plymouth Colony, the work recounts the Pilgrims' departure from England, their exile in the Netherlands, the Atlantic crossing aboard the Mayflower, and the precarious establishment of settlement in New England. Bradford records famine, diplomacy with Native peoples, internal dissent, religious conviction, and the daily realities of survival with restrained clarity and theological seriousness.
Neither polemic nor legend, the narrative offers a sober account of providence, governance, and communal discipline in a fragile colonial experiment. Its language reflects the scriptural cadences and moral framework of seventeenth-century Protestant thought, while its observations preserve indispensable details of early colonial society. As a primary historical document, Of Plymouth Plantation remains foundational for the study of American origins, Puritan theology, and colonial governance.
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