The power of their faith is evident from the beginning. They want their freedom of religion, which is why they left the only life and familiar places they know, seeking freedom they desire very much they crave . British people who want to change and to prove that their beliefs are the most important to them, can be seen to be a life changing experience for everyone sailing. The conclusion is that in the presence of the Virginia government and their friends they are themselves prosecuted as independent institutions, and he is happy to give them religious freedom.
The first, and perhaps the most widely known chronicle, is the Plymouth Plantation of William Bradford. Bradford is one of the two leaders of the Mayflower Group and has served as Governor of Plymouth Plantation for 30 years (re-election each year). His history, written between 1630 and 1650, provides us with two typical elements in the New World. It is him who fears human evils more and more to destroy this experiment. The overall tone of the Bradford chronicle whose heroes are often mixed with depression is probably the best example is a famous passage explaining the first impression of American colonists:
Plymouth Plantation is the source of the first hand of Mayflower voyage and is the first 25 years of settlement in Plymouth, Massachusetts. This is a Mayflower passenger, a journal written by William Bradford, a compound term for Governor Plymouth. In retrospect, he appeared in Plymouth Plantation as a role of narrator and story event. In 1920 the manuscript evolved from Harold Paget into modern English and was first published under the name of Burma's Plymouth Settlement History 1608-1650. A complete re-publication of this article holding part of Paget was first published by Dover Publications, Inc. in 2006.