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Excerpt from History of Plymouth Plantation, 1620-1647, Vol. 1 of 2
The Pilgrim Fathers at first established themselves at Plymouth as a matter Of necessity. Later, they with deliberation chose to remain in a place which was soon overshadowed and absorbed by a colony occupying a site in every respect more advantageous. For nearly ten years, however, the planters at New Plymouth remained the only English settlers north Of Chesapeake Bay, a few scattered fishing and trading establishments alone excepted. Prior to 1630 the history Of New Plymouth was the history Of New England. The earlier settlements were Sporadic in character, and unim portant so far as the subsequent settlement was concerned, exercising no appreciable in¿uence Upon it. Their story has been told in all necessary de tail. With the coming Of the Endecott party the importance Of the neigh boring plantation declined, and as Massachusetts Bay increased in numbers and in¿uence, New Plymouth lost authority, and with the confederation Of 1643 threw its lot in with the more powerful bodies. As an historical factor it practically ceased to exist.
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