I love that you are able to see and enjoy mass , still shocked that I met you haha .. hopefully we cross paths again.. I did dm you on your ig page, ❤ keep up the hard work ..
There are so many more places to explore in mass. If your still around, come to my store an food will be on me. White hut ( it's been a steeple of the hamburger world since 1939 )
Loved this Adam. 😃 Our family and our family friends went on a trip up around the New England states the Summer of 1968. There were 6 of us and 7 of them. So every where we stopped we were a group.😄 It was great to see many of these places again. 🤗👍🏼
I remember visiting Plymouth the summer I was 16. My mom was a high school American history teacher, and she took us to so many historical sights as kids. If I remember correctly, the rock was hauled around town a longggg time ago during a parade - it fell off of the horse cart and broke in two. On that same trip, we visited Salem, Boston, Philadelphia and other early American landmarks. Thanks for unlocking a childhood memory for me, Woo ❤
Mayflower II was built in 1956 in the UK and sailed over to Massachusetts. I visited Plymouth as a kid when my family spent a week in Cape Cod, and also saw Plymouth Rock, but didn't get to go aboard, because as I recall, we didn't have a whole lot of time to spend in Plymouth, either because my Dad was trying to save money or because he had a lot of other places he wanted to take us.
Beautiful job on this, Adam. Love our early history. If you should ever visit Rhode Island. Go to the City of Pawtucket and check out the SLATER MILL. This is where the American Industrial Revolution began. Take the full Tour they will take you below and show you the Paddle Wheel and let you see it running. Next to the Slater Mill is the Wilkinson Mill, this mill used a Turbine instead of a Wheel. During the time I lived there. The Turbine needed a re-build. Samuel Slater built the water wheel from memory as Great Britain would not allow the blueprints to leave England. Rhode Island has some Amazing Historical sites. 🙂
When I was 15, I spent a very similar day with my grand parents, who are no longer with us, in the 90s. I still have the videos my grandma took and lots of photos. So many great memories.
Plimouth Plantation was a frequent field trip as an elementary school kid in the 1980s in Massachusetts. This year my family and I will be having our Thanksgiving meal at Plimouth Plantation, which has been a dream for my dad for many years.
It was nice getting to visit some places I haven’t been in years! Gave me a new appreciation for Plymouth and all its history.. Safe travels back home 🤘
Love the new content...Glad your branching out from Disney and all the theme parks...I had NO clue you could go actually see the rock.. loved this video.. keep it up, Adam ❤❤❤❤
So glad you stopped in my neck of the woods! You should stop in Duxbury and visit the oldest government maintained cemetery in the country where Myles Standish is buried. Theres also a statue of him in town that you can climb and see for miles. Lots of history in this area. Glad you were finally able to see it!
Gail here ! You need to go to Jamestown , Virginia the first permanent English settlement in America . It's also Southern ! It has actual remains and a recreation . Also Williamsburg it has actual buildings from the colonial period . I have visited Plymouth Rock in Plymouth , England . I was in awe !
Virginian native here! Yes!!!! I studied VA history even in elementary. After college I left but enriched my mind with all the history. I loved Yorktown, Jamestown, Williamsburg Colonial village and battlefields. Through the years it got so expensive!!!! So fortunate to have seen and learned history!
I love Boston. One of my favorite places in the world. So much history. I toured the Mayflower II on a fieldtrip from school, I guess I was in 5th or 6th grade. We also visited the old Farmers Market and the New England Aquarium. I remember we ate at the Marriot hotel and we were served shish-kebob. I thought that was a weird thing to serve kids of 9 or 10 lol Very cool place that village. I don't recall seeing that before. Awesome video :)
What an awesome memory 👍 I agree that shish kabob is a really weird thing to offer to middle schoolers! Hamburgers, fries, pizza, chicken nugs YES - but shish kababs?
The Patuxet were a part of the Wampanoag tribe which lived in the Plimoth (now Plymouth) area, so the name change from Plantation made it so the Native people of the area were also represented in the name alongside the settlers, rather than just the latter.
The original Mayflower sailed back to the UK. There are some historians that say it was scrapped for its timber, then used to construct a barn in Jordans, England. The boat that came back was a replica
Great video. I spent the majority of my life south of Boston including 8 years in Plymouth. We really lived history and love the American experience. Today unfortunately schools neglect this education. Years ago the rock was moved to the center of town and people were encouraged to chip off a chunk to take home, what were they thinking?
The original Mayflower is now a barn in England. The Mayflower was deemed un-seaworthy not long after the pilgrim voyage. Old ships were sold to farmers back then and they converted them to barns. Hence the fate of the Mayflower.
Adam, just loved this vlog! You certainly gave me an education, I am so interested now that I am going on internet to learn more about the Pilgrims. I can’t believe those little home types ever could exist in all the storms just in the past few years. I look forward now to learn more about The Mayflower and how those people existed under the conditions then, Thanks, 🙏🏽🌴🐿️
Wow now you’re really in my neck of the woods! I work right up the street from Plymouth Rock and I’m from another town named by the Wampanoag called Acushnet meaning “peaceful resting place near water” as we are right on the Acushnet River.
This was cool Woo. The Mooflower was nightmare fuel though. I first learned a lot about the Mayflower and Plymouth Rock just from watching "This Is America, Charlie Brown: The Mayflower Voyagers". 🙃
This is the greatest little town, the actors are superb, family and I visited this past summer from TX, and the young man portrayed here is exactly as he was when we were there. Never out of character and very knowledgeable. Was an excellent Homeschool field trip!
Again, I and many others watch your channel for the popular and the lesser known locations. Many of us cannot for whatever reason view them ourselves and so it’s nice to visit them from your perspective. We appreciate the touring of America!
Adam, this is a great video. So interesting. Thank you so much for showing these videos to people like me that will never be able to see these places and things in person. So much history. Keep up the great work. Be safe and Happy Trails. ❤️ God Bless.
Ahh you made it to Plymouth! Which is known as "America's Hometown!". I live only minutes away from Plymouth. Alot to do, you picked the right time to visit, in summer, as you say, that area is a beehive of activity!! Cape Cod canal, Train bridge, great spot sun rises and sunsets!
Thanks so much for this p[resentation. This was a nice educational video wiuth a light side, but mostly with some important HISTORICAL stuff. Thanks muchly.
I luv how your buddy was honest, saying hes grew up there and seen all this stuff so many times growing up it wasnt that exciting. Until hes w someone thays never seen it before. Its funny how you may see things like this close to you, and not be impressed amymore. But spne people may never see whatever it is ever in person other than on tv or the internet.
@@Grandizer8989 It's basically a an inlet to a harbour with a lock gate now, but back then it was a tidal basin. There are just some steps with a small pillared roof. The original steps are further away underneath a building as the area was rebuilt a few times.
My neck of the woods here. There was one child born on the voyage, he was named Oceanus. There was a second child born on the ship after they docked in Plymouth, and while they were living on the ship those months. The statue of Massasoit (Mass-a-soy-it)is positioned on the spot where he was first seen by the Pilgrims. Fun to see your reaction and I appreciate your respect for the history!
Adam, really enjoyed your awesome and cool video! That's so awesome you got to see Plymouth Rock. Thank you for taking me along with you on your travels!
Glad you had fun in Plymouth! Hopefully soon you can see Cape Cod proper and go all the way to the tip of Provincetown! Maybe even further and explore Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket some day! ⛵
I love grist mills, my favorite cider mill Yates Cider Mill in Rochester Hills, Michigan started out as a grist mill before being converted to a cider mill.
Awesome thanks for the video. We live in Swansea Ma. and when we go camping for a whole week we go to Pinewood lodge in Plymouth. Nothing beats the beautiful surroundings and history, and it’s only 45 minutes away from home.
Thank you VERY MUCH for making this video. I was injured serving during The War on Terror and m not able to go see this historic place. Being that my 10 Great Grandfather was William Bradford, this means a lot to me.
I am related to John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley. The original Mayflower was back in England and taken apart. There is a great documentary about what they think happen to the wood .
When I first visited Plymouth, the Rock was above where it is now, in the open. You could walk up and touch it. The problem was that people were chipping pieces off of it for souvenirs. They moved it to where you saw it and made it so you couldn't access it.
I’m looking forward to visiting to see if I can learn more about the White family. My 10th great-grandfather was William White, whose name is shown on the list of those who died the first year. Susanna White eventually got married to Edward Winslow, whose wife also died that first year. I am loving your historical videos.
If you like reenactment villages there is Sturbridge Village in Sturbridge Massachusetts or Mystic Connecticut is wonderful for the Mystic Seaport which is pretty close too
Adam I love the Block house with cannons. I went to Jamestown Virginia and they blow glass so if you’re looking to do another ( historical period) visit I would recommend it😊
Thanks for a great learning experience of historical goodness and the area was so beautiful but most of all it was nice seeing you being able to see apart of history the Mayflower and Plymouth Rock I’m sure that’s a memory you’ll never forget and yes it truly was a great day now with that peace ☮️ love ❤️ and happiness to you Adam and I’ll see you on the next awesome vlog adventure peace ☮️ out ✌️
Really enjoyed the blog. I was born in Plymouth Devon in the UK and we also have a landmark The Mayflower Steps where the Mayflower was docked. Very interesting indeed. Thanks Adam.
Plymouth pebble! 🪨 😅 when we visited, we were shocked at how small it was. I always pictured it as some giant coastal cliff, or a rock of Gibraltar-type structure! 😆
Thank you for visiting Plymouth. I’ve been watching you off and on for years. Started watching when I lived in Plymouth and continue watching now that I live in central Florida (Clermont, actually). Lived in Plymouth most of my life and my wife is a direct descendant of Pricilla Mullins, a mayflower passenger. Hope you enjoyed Plymouth. It is everything to me- my childhood, my children’s childhood and where home will always be.
The book makes it sound like they had a huge party on Plymouth Rock huge like an island. 😂😂 it's just this small rock . Just like everything else in history It's just a story!!!!
What a great tour! I have been to Plymouth and need to go to the Plantation, my 10th Great Grandparents came over on the Mayflower (John &Priscilla Alden). You saw the folks that were at the First Thanksgiving, only around 1/2 of them survived until the 2nd one.
Instagram- AdamTheWooATW
Really enjoyed this area and finally getting to see it with my own eyes. The grist mill up close was really dang cool
I love that you are able to see and enjoy mass , still shocked that I met you haha .. hopefully we cross paths again.. I did dm you on your ig page, ❤ keep up the hard work ..
There are so many more places to explore in mass. If your still around, come to my store an food will be on me. White hut ( it's been a steeple of the hamburger world since 1939 )
History, celebrated not desecrated. Thank you, TheDailyWoo.
Good morning Adam from Gatlinburg 🌄😉🐻
Loved this Adam. 😃 Our family and our family friends went on a trip up around the New England states the Summer of 1968. There were 6 of us and 7 of them. So every where we stopped we were a group.😄 It was great to see many of these places again. 🤗👍🏼
I remember visiting Plymouth the summer I was 16. My mom was a high school American history teacher, and she took us to so many historical sights as kids. If I remember correctly, the rock was hauled around town a longggg time ago during a parade - it fell off of the horse cart and broke in two. On that same trip, we visited Salem, Boston, Philadelphia and other early American landmarks. Thanks for unlocking a childhood memory for me, Woo ❤
Mayflower II was built in 1956 in the UK and sailed over to Massachusetts. I visited Plymouth as a kid when my family spent a week in Cape Cod, and also saw Plymouth Rock, but didn't get to go aboard, because as I recall, we didn't have a whole lot of time to spend in Plymouth, either because my Dad was trying to save money or because he had a lot of other places he wanted to take us.
Beautiful job on this, Adam. Love our early history. If you should ever visit Rhode Island. Go to the City of Pawtucket and check out the SLATER MILL. This is where the American Industrial Revolution began. Take the full Tour they will take you below and show you the Paddle Wheel and let you see it running. Next to the Slater Mill is the Wilkinson Mill, this mill used a Turbine instead of a Wheel. During the time I lived there. The Turbine needed a re-build. Samuel Slater built the water wheel from memory as Great Britain would not allow the blueprints to leave England. Rhode Island has some Amazing Historical sites. 🙂
When I was 15, I spent a very similar day with my grand parents, who are no longer with us, in the 90s. I still have the videos my grandma took and lots of photos. So many great memories.
Yay! Please do more historical stops! 😊😊😊😊😊😊
Plimouth Plantation was a frequent field trip as an elementary school kid in the 1980s in Massachusetts. This year my family and I will be having our Thanksgiving meal at Plimouth Plantation, which has been a dream for my dad for many years.
It was nice getting to visit some places I haven’t been in years! Gave me a new appreciation for Plymouth and all its history.. Safe travels back home 🤘
It’s been great seeing you in the vlogs- also leading me to become a new sub on YOUR channel. Cheers, brotha!
@@corysimp thanks so much!!
@@BenLaurence hay Ben by the way a reltive of John cena and Taylor swift is with the other pilgrims
@@tommyt1357 imagine johh cena and t swift in pilgrim outfits 🤣 sounds like a great snl skit
@@BenLaurence so you know richard warren the mayflower compact singer it was there reltive and hes with the other people in the bo
I am LOVING these historic sites vlogs! Please do more!!
Love the new content...Glad your branching out from Disney and all the theme parks...I had NO clue you could go actually see the rock.. loved this video.. keep it up, Adam ❤❤❤❤
I absolutely LOVE going and visiting historic sites and recreations. ❤ this video!
I really am delighted to see you back in New England this year. Keep it up.
What a great day for you and us viewers as well.
So glad you stopped in my neck of the woods! You should stop in Duxbury and visit the oldest government maintained cemetery in the country where Myles Standish is buried. Theres also a statue of him in town that you can climb and see for miles. Lots of history in this area. Glad you were finally able to see it!
I have been to that cemetery, My10th Great Grandparents were buried near Myles Standish, they were John & Priscilla Alden.
Gail here ! You need to go to Jamestown , Virginia the first permanent English settlement in America . It's also Southern ! It has actual remains and a recreation . Also Williamsburg it has actual buildings from the colonial period . I have visited Plymouth Rock in Plymouth , England . I was in awe !
Virginian native here! Yes!!!! I studied VA history even in elementary. After college I left but enriched my mind with all the history. I loved Yorktown, Jamestown, Williamsburg Colonial village and battlefields. Through the years it got so expensive!!!! So fortunate to have seen and learned history!
I love Boston. One of my favorite places in the world. So much history. I toured the Mayflower II on a fieldtrip from school, I guess I was in 5th or 6th grade. We also visited the old Farmers Market and the New England Aquarium. I remember we ate at the Marriot hotel and we were served shish-kebob. I thought that was a weird thing to serve kids of 9 or 10 lol Very cool place that village. I don't recall seeing that before. Awesome video :)
What an awesome memory 👍 I agree that shish kabob is a really weird thing to offer to middle schoolers! Hamburgers, fries, pizza, chicken nugs YES - but shish kababs?
Loving these videos of our historical sites. Thank you.
Excellent video thank you Adam. So much history there.
The Patuxet were a part of the Wampanoag tribe which lived in the Plimoth (now Plymouth) area, so the name change from Plantation made it so the Native people of the area were also represented in the name alongside the settlers, rather than just the latter.
The original Mayflower sailed back to the UK. There are some historians that say it was scrapped for its timber, then used to construct a barn in Jordans, England. The boat that came back was a replica
Seriously lol! How many people think that first one was the original!
@@Shelly-in-TampaWhat are you even talking about?
@@williamdesmarais4931Scrapped
So excited to see this! I’m a Wampanoag Indian, I now live in Florida and wamponoag are only state recognized. Thanks for going!
Great video. I spent the majority of my life south of Boston including 8 years in Plymouth. We really lived history and love the American experience. Today unfortunately schools neglect this education. Years ago the rock was moved to the center of town and people were encouraged to chip off a chunk to take home, what were they thinking?
That was over a century ago. They built the cover over it to stop this practice. That's why it is so unimpressive in size.
If you have time, check out Old Sturbridge Village in Sturbridge, MA. It's the largest living museum in New England.
Thank you for going there! One branch of my family came over on the Mayflower. I loved seeing all of this.
I so enjoy places like that, thanks for taking me along
Thank You for letting us see Plymouth Rock through your eyes. I'm happy for you too. The grist mill was cool to see it in operation.
The original Mayflower is now a barn in England. The Mayflower was deemed un-seaworthy not long after the pilgrim voyage. Old ships were sold to farmers back then and they converted them to barns. Hence the fate of the Mayflower.
Yea, I heard that.
Super interesting fact right there!
Thankyou for sharing something interesting!
That’s really cool. I didn’t know that!
Cool information. Thanks for sharing that!
Adam, just loved this vlog! You certainly gave me an education, I am so interested now that I am going on internet to learn more about the Pilgrims. I can’t believe those little home types ever could exist in all the storms just in the past few years. I look forward now to learn more about The Mayflower and how those people existed under the conditions then, Thanks, 🙏🏽🌴🐿️
Wow now you’re really in my neck of the woods! I work right up the street from Plymouth Rock and I’m from another town named by the Wampanoag called Acushnet meaning “peaceful resting place near water” as we are right on the Acushnet River.
This was cool Woo. The Mooflower was nightmare fuel though. I first learned a lot about the Mayflower and Plymouth Rock just from watching "This Is America, Charlie Brown: The Mayflower Voyagers". 🙃
This is the greatest little town, the actors are superb, family and I visited this past summer from TX, and the young man portrayed here is exactly as he was when we were there. Never out of character and very knowledgeable. Was an excellent Homeschool field trip!
Adam, this was awesome! Thank you for taking us along!
Again, I and many others watch your channel for the popular and the lesser known locations. Many of us cannot for whatever reason view them ourselves and so it’s nice to visit them from your perspective. We appreciate the touring of America!
Love this, you're in my neck of the woods. I used to go to Plimouth Plantation on a school trip.
Great video Adam. Love when you spend time sharing the info of the places you visit.
Adam, this is a great video. So interesting. Thank you so much for showing these videos to people like me that will never be able to see these places and things in person. So much history. Keep up the great work. Be safe and Happy Trails. ❤️ God Bless.
My mother's family came here on both the first and 2nd voyages of the mayflower . I was amazed , humbled and proud to find this in my heritage
A great run of videos, all places I have never been, thanks for the mindcation
Thx Adam for this vlog. I’ve always wanted to see this area and part of history. It was awesome.
I have been watching you for yrs. Wish I knew you were coming out here. Would have been cool to show you around. Enjoy your time here!
This is something else! I'd never imagined the way that village looked..Great experience.
Ahh you made it to Plymouth! Which is known as "America's Hometown!". I live only minutes away from Plymouth. Alot to do, you picked the right time to visit, in summer, as you say, that area is a beehive of activity!! Cape Cod canal, Train bridge, great spot sun rises and sunsets!
Very cool…. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for the history lesson.
Thanks so much for this p[resentation. This was a nice educational video wiuth a light side, but mostly with some important HISTORICAL stuff. Thanks muchly.
As a native New Englander, Massachusetts to be specific, thank you for this current series of videos. Recently transplanted to Winter Haven.
Ben is a cool dude. Great job taking Adam around your “neck of the woods”.
Wow this is awesome, never though you'd check out where I grew up. I'm from Scituate, but the south shore is awesome and packed with history.
I luv how your buddy was honest, saying hes grew up there and seen all this stuff so many times growing up it wasnt that exciting. Until hes w someone thays never seen it before. Its funny how you may see things like this close to you, and not be impressed amymore. But spne people may never see whatever it is ever in person other than on tv or the internet.
Seeing it from the perspective of someone who has never been to the area was really cool.. Gave me a new appreciation for the town I grew up in
You should come to the UK sometime and visit where the Mayflower set sail from Plymouth Devon
I live in Plymouth South West UK, where the Pilgrims sailed from. Nice to see one of the other Plymouth's and very interesting tour.
What does the dock(s) where the Mayflower sailed from look like now?
@@Grandizer8989 It's basically a an inlet to a harbour with a lock gate now, but back then it was a tidal basin. There are just some steps with a small pillared roof. The original steps are further away underneath a building as the area was rebuilt a few times.
@@UKMitchy thanks for the reply!
Great tour of Plymouth. You did miss the huge Founders statue on the hill above Plymouth.
loved this, we love history
Great video, Adam, thanks for this!!!!!!! As a history person, it was nice to learn a little more than I already knew. Thanks again!
My neck of the woods here. There was one child born on the voyage, he was named Oceanus. There was a second child born on the ship after they docked in Plymouth, and while they were living on the ship those months. The statue of Massasoit (Mass-a-soy-it)is positioned on the spot where he was first seen by the Pilgrims. Fun to see your reaction and I appreciate your respect for the history!
We used to go to Plymouth every summer in the 80's,great area,lots of history.
Love this video, recently listened to a radio drama on the pilgrims and this brought everything I heard in picture form. Thank you
Adam, really enjoyed your awesome and cool video! That's so awesome you got to see Plymouth Rock. Thank you for taking me along with you on your travels!
This was so excellent thank you for taking us along.
Good morning from Gatlinburg TN Smoky mountain 🌄 I was there in 1985 .. Wow!!!
Thanks Adam, this was very interesting to see.
because of my age and health i thank you Adam for taking me to places that i wouldnt be able to visit.. love your blogs
Loved this video! I’m related to a few people that were on the Mayflower and it’s cool to see. Bucket list one day to go to Plymouth!
This is awesome. Thank you for taking us along. Safe travels-Joe from Joplin MO
Fascinating video. I loved the tour of the Mayflower.
Glad you had fun in Plymouth! Hopefully soon you can see Cape Cod proper and go all the way to the tip of Provincetown! Maybe even further and explore Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket some day! ⛵
Welcome to New England. I'm from new Hampshire and a direct Mayflower descendant - Tilly family, the whites and Howland.
Thank you for doing this. I am glad you did it. There is a national monument to the founding fathers you should cover. It overlooks Plymouth.
I love grist mills, my favorite cider mill Yates Cider Mill in Rochester Hills, Michigan started out as a grist mill before being converted to a cider mill.
Awesome thanks for the video. We live in Swansea Ma. and when we go camping for a whole week we go to Pinewood lodge in Plymouth. Nothing beats the beautiful surroundings and history, and it’s only 45 minutes away from home.
great video.... havent been to these places in Plymouth in sooo many years..... loved seeing a new update on these areas.....thanks for the video...
Thank you VERY MUCH for making this video. I was injured serving during The War on Terror and m not able to go see this historic place. Being that my 10 Great Grandfather was William Bradford, this means a lot to me.
This is the greatest Vlog! I have never been here. Gives me a great appreciation of the history! Love history! Thank you Adam
I am related to John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley. The original Mayflower was back in England and taken apart. There is a great documentary about what they think happen to the wood .
Hope not into the fire pit!
@@Shelly-in-Tampa they believe it became wood for a barn in the English Country Side .
Such a great adventure! Thank you for sharing this!
Nice work man. I am glad you are enjoying Massachusetts
Cole’s hill was named for my Great grandfather (9 times) James Cole.
Fun to see you visit there!!
Wow! It's so fascinating to see real objects of history that were so briefly and boringly related in a school text book. :)
"...But I can assure you they are not rose colored." -Animatronic Ben Franklin. Love the quote, Adam!
Vary interesting video full of history, it was a pleasure to watch. Be happy and blessed ❤
When I first visited Plymouth, the Rock was above where it is now, in the open. You could walk up and touch it. The problem was that people were chipping pieces off of it for souvenirs. They moved it to where you saw it and made it so you couldn't access it.
Fun to see you in places other than FL and CA. Lots to see and do on the East coat!
Love the history vlogs Adam! Thank you!
I enjoyed that a lot. Thank you!!
I’m looking forward to visiting to see if I can learn more about the White family. My 10th great-grandfather was William White, whose name is shown on the list of those who died the first year. Susanna White eventually got married to Edward Winslow, whose wife also died that first year. I am loving your historical videos.
Wow, your family history sounds fascinating! Good luck on the search.
If you like reenactment villages there is Sturbridge Village in Sturbridge Massachusetts or Mystic Connecticut is wonderful for the Mystic Seaport which is pretty close too
This content is a breath of fresh air from Disney stuff! Please do more and great video Adam.
History. I love it. Thanks Adam 🤗💖
Adam I love the Block house with cannons. I went to Jamestown Virginia and they blow glass so if you’re looking to do another ( historical period) visit I would recommend it😊
Great video Adam! I've really enjoyed seeing all the historical sites!
Thanks for a great learning experience of historical goodness and the area was so beautiful but most of all it was nice seeing you being able to see apart of history the Mayflower and Plymouth Rock I’m sure that’s a memory you’ll never forget and yes it truly was a great day now with that peace ☮️ love ❤️ and happiness to you Adam and I’ll see you on the next awesome vlog adventure peace ☮️ out ✌️
Really enjoyed the blog. I was born in Plymouth Devon in the UK and we also have a landmark The Mayflower Steps where the Mayflower was docked. Very interesting indeed. Thanks Adam.
Cannot even imagine how gruesome that journey on The Mayflower must of been for 66 days, loved that vlog Adam
I am enjoying your videos from the New England area- the historic stops are fascinating and the foliage in the background is breathtaking !!
Plymouth pebble! 🪨 😅 when we visited, we were shocked at how small it was. I always pictured it as some giant coastal cliff, or a rock of Gibraltar-type structure! 😆
Thank you for visiting Plymouth. I’ve been watching you off and on for years. Started watching when I lived in Plymouth and continue watching now that I live in central Florida (Clermont, actually). Lived in Plymouth most of my life and my wife is a direct descendant of Pricilla Mullins, a mayflower passenger. Hope you enjoyed Plymouth. It is everything to me- my childhood, my children’s childhood and where home will always be.
When I visited, I was suprised at how small Plymouth Rock is!
The book makes it sound like they had a huge party on Plymouth Rock huge like an island. 😂😂 it's just this small rock . Just like everything else in history It's just a story!!!!
The rock has gotten smaller over the years do to it breaking apart from storms i do believe reading about.
It was larger, but people kept chipping pieces off and that is what they built the monument around it.
Been there. It’s incredible to see in person for some. Proud to say I was on the ship when it came over.
What a great tour! I have been to Plymouth and need to go to the Plantation, my 10th Great Grandparents came over on the Mayflower (John &Priscilla Alden). You saw the folks that were at the First Thanksgiving, only around 1/2 of them survived until the 2nd one.
I did not get to this area when I was in Mass. years back. Thanks for the video!