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When the Mayflower left Plymouth, England on September 6, , eighteen of its passengers were adult women. While the written sources left behind by the Pilgrims make little mention of these eighteen women compared to their more well known husbands, from what we do know we can begin to piece together their lives.
Some women on the Mayflower had previously been living in Holland as part of a separatist congregation, while others remained a part of the Church of England. Some traveled ahead of children they hoped would join them later, some came with their entire family, and three were pregnant when they boarded the ship.
In and , members of a separatist congregation which included many eventual Mayflower passengers, attempted to leave England for the Netherlands, where other like-minded religious dissenters were already living. During the second of these attempts, the women and children were delayed in meeting their group, while the men already at the appointed rendezvous boarded the ship waiting to take them to the Netherlands. The Mayflower was already overcrowded, as it took on passengers from the leaky ship Speedwell, which was to accompany it to New England.
Elizabeth Hopkins, traveling with her husband, two stepchildren, and daughter, gave birth to her son Oceanus during the voyage. About a year after the arrival of the Mayflower , the ship Fortune reached Plimoth bringing more settlers in November The women of the Mayflower courageously left their homeland and traveled the vast Atlantic Ocean during storm season. These resolute women survived the illnesses of the first winter, accepted responsibilities of raising the orphaned children of fellow passengers, prepared homes, harvested crops and worked alongside new Wampanoag friends.
Women of the Mayflower. Top of Page.