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Histories
History of the Utah Society
First slate of Officers Governor: Mr. John Mason Boutwell Recording Secretary: Mrs. Mildred E. (Tuttle) Stockman Corresponding Secretary: Mrs. Edith (Smith) Elliott
General Officers Deputy Governor General: Mr. John Mason Boutwell, elected September 10, 1951 Assistant General: Mr. Charles C. Parsons, elected September 10, 1951
Charter Members
Governors
1954 - 1957 Mr. Gerald Gay Smith 1958 - 1960 Mr. Ernest E. House 1961 - 1963 Mr. Maxwell E. Rich 1964 - 1967 Mr. Mark H. Nichols 1967 - 1968 Mrs. Frances (Nuttall) Boyden 1969 - 1970 Mr. John Henry Smith 1970 - 1971 Mr. Reed Smoot 1971 - 1975 Mr. Gerald Gay Smith 1976 - 1979 Mr. Byron Snow Gibbs 1980 - 1981 Mr. Lamond W. Robinson 1982 - 1985 Mr. Gerald G. Smith, Jr. 1985 - 1999 Mr. Russell Nichols 1999 - Mrs. Elaine (Smedley) Holbrook
The State of Utah has a special connection to Plymouth, MA. As early as 1911, Cyrus E. Dallin, a Utah resident, made a figure of Massasoit (pictured above), the friendly chief of the Wampanoags who greeted the Pilgrim colonists at Plymouth Rock. The details of this first study of Massasoit, who stood with unbraided hair and clothed in animal skins and leggings, were suggested to Dallin by Arthur Lord, president of the Pilgrim Society, who furnished Dallin with authentic descriptions of the Indian. The statue was to be placed on Coles Hill, facing Plymouth Rock. The completion of the statue was delayed by the outbreak of World War I, which stalled fund raising activities. By 1920, Dallin had considerably revised his Massasoit, abandoning many of the details of the earlier model. The heroic-sized bronze figure of Massasoit was finally erected at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1921 on a field boulder overlooking the sea. In 1922, Dallin presented the original plaster figure of this Massasoit to the State of Utah, and it was displayed in the rotunda of the Utah State Capitol in Salt Lake City. Later it was duplicated in bronze by the Nicholas Morgan Sr. Foundation and placed in the gardens in front of the capitol building. The plaster replica was then given to Brigham Young University at Provo, Utah.
History of the General Society
Some
states found that their organizations worked better by establishing
Colonies. Colonies share the administrative responsibilities for their
Societies and make it easier for members to attend and participate. By
1963, all fifty states and the District of Columbia had established
Societies. The latest charter was granted to the Canada Society in 1980.
These and many other events are described in the Centennial History of the General Society Of Mayflower Descendants, 1897-1997, which is the primary source for this information.
History of the Mayflower Voyage On July 22, 1620, the Pilgrims boarded the ship Speedwell in Delfthaven, Holland, and said their tearful good-byes to their friends and church-members whom they were leaving behind. In fact, they were leaving the majority of their church congregation behind--even their pastor, John Robinson, was not coming with them. But the intent was to send these first few men and women to establish the colony: then the rest of the church would be able to come over later. Pastor Robinson preached a sermon on Ezra 8:21. As the time to depart arrived, Pastor Robinson fell to his knees and "with watery cheeks commended them with most fervent prayers."
The Pilgrims sailed on the Speedwell from Delfthaven, Holland to Southampton, England, where they met up with the Mayflower that had just come down from London. The Mayflower had a number of other passengers from England that the Pilgrims did not really know yet--they were friends or investors that had become interested in the voyage while the Pilgrims were trying to raise enough money to undertake the trip. In Southampton, the ships were loaded with food and supplies for the voyage: but the Pilgrims were so short of money they had to sell off most of their oil and butter before they could leave. The Mayflower and Speedwell departed for America on August 5 from Southampton, but after just a short time sailing through the English Channel they were forced into Dartmouth because the Speedwell was leaking. They were delayed several weeks, but finally headed off to America from Dartmouth on August 24. They Mayflower and Speedwell cleared the English channel, and were nearly 300 miles into the Atlantic when word came that the Speedwell was again leaking, and would have to turn back. The two ships returned to Plymouth, England, where it was decided that the Speedwell was not capable of making the voyage. About 20 passengers, most quite frustrated with the voyage and very happy for an excuse to quit, were sent home to England and Holland. The remaining passengers and cargo were transferred from the Speedwell over to the Mayflower.
Finally,
after a month of delays and problems, the Mayflower put to sea
again, leaving Plymouth, England on September 6, 1620, with 102 passengers
(three of which were pregnant women), and a crew of about 30.
One of the sailors on the voyage was remembered as having been very vulgar and rude. He used to laugh at the passengers sea-sickness, and told everyone he hoped to throw half of them overboard after they had died, and then take all their possessions for himself. He cursed and swore terribly. In the end, though, he ended up being the first to get sick, and soon died of a very painful disease, and was in fact the first person thrown overboard. The Pilgrims saw the hand of God in his death, as Bradford wrote "Thus his curses light on his own head, and it was an astonishment to all his fellows for they noted it to be the just hand of God upon him."
Unfortunately for the passengers, the smooth sailing came to an end about half-way across the ocean. The Mayflower was hit with many strong storms and cross-winds, and the ship was so badly shaken that she became very leaky, with water dripping and falling down upon the passengers that were living between the decks. The storms were often bad enough that the Mayflower's crew had to take down the sails, and just let the storm blow the ship wherever it wanted. During one of these bad storms, one of the main beams of the ship bowed and cracked, causing some of the crewmembers and passengers to fear the ship would not be able to continue the voyage. After consulting with the master, Christopher Jones, it was decided the ship was sturdy, and had a good history of surviving such storms, so a great iron screw was used to raise the main beam back into place.
During another storm, passenger John Howland happened to come above deck, and was swept off the ship into the ocean. He just managed to grab a hold of the topsail halyards, and held on long enough for the Mayflower's crew to rescue him with a boathook. William Bradford noted, "though he was something ill with it, yet he lived many years after and became a profitable member both of church and commonwealth". Howland is an ancestor to many people, including Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and George Bush, actor Humphrey Bogart, and founder of the Mormons Joseph Smith.
Finally, the passengers and crew began to sense they were getting close to land. Three days out, a young boy, William Button, who came on the Mayflower in the custody of doctor Samuel Fuller, died. He was the first passenger to die, and the only passenger to die while the ship was at sea. On the morning of November 9, after more than two months at sea (not to mention a month of delays on board the ships back in England), they spotted land, which they later found to be Cape Cod. After 2750 miles, traveling at an average speed of just under 2 mph, the voyage was nearly over.
With the voyage having come to an end, the Pilgrim men set out to explore Cape Cod and gather firewood, while the Pilgrim women were brought ashore to do the laundry.
The foregoing history was obtained from Caleb Johnson's web site, www.mayflowerhistory.com.
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