Educational Programs
Classroom Visits
In an effort to bring the true story of spirit, purity of purpose and steadfastness
of will of the Mayflower ancestors to today’s youth, each spring the State
Society completely funds classroom visits to elementary schools in the Commonwealth
by museum instructors from the 1627 living history museum, Plimoth Plantation
of Plymouth, Massachusetts. A number of schools have been selected for these
visits in the Greater Erie, Harrisburg, Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh areas
with approximately 15,000 third through sixth graders sharing in this experience
in the past six years. Museum instructors in the persona of one of the 1627
residents of the Plymouth Colony visit the classes in authentic costume, speaking
the 17th century dialect of the English shire from which they originated,
and with the knowledge of only what has transpired up to 1627. Each teacher
of the class to be visited determines whether the subject will be the trip
over on the Mayflower or day to day life in the Plymouth Colony. High on the
agenda of each program is a lesson in traditional English civility and the
demonstration of proper respect to others.
The instructor will select a boy and girl to play his or her siblings and
then choose another boy and girl to aid them in donning 17th century children's
clothing. The second couple then play roles of the Pilgrim’s father and mother.
Very quickly a family’s typical day in the early settlement unfolds with morning
chores followed by a breaking of the fast, planting corn, and a description
of other duties. The effect of primogeniture on the siblings, the early settlement’s
reliance on the native people for help, and the education of children in a
school-less settlement are also discussed. Inner-city school children experiencing
the visits have indicated that they can identify with the immigrant Mayflower
passengers. Following the visits, the students often send letters, art work
or poems to their Pilgrim. Often the same schools participate in the program
annually.
Pilgrim-oriented Videos and Teacher Kits
As it is impossible to fund classroom visits to all of the 3669 public elementary
schools in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, but still wishing to provide
factual information about the Pilgrims to as many school children as possible.
The State Society has purchased and donated seven of the latest historically
correct Pilgrim-oriented videos to the audio/visual libraries of the Pennsylvania
Department of Education’s twenty-nine Intermediate Units. The production of
these videos was sponsored by either the General Society of Mayflower Descendants
or the Plimoth Plantation. Recently a teacher’s kit has been presented to
each school taking part in the annual spring Classroom Visits.
Pilgrims: Then and Now
In 1990 the State Society sponsored its own publication about the Pilgrims
and how their covenant concept "played a major role in the formation of the
church to which they pledged mutual aid in the care of one another." Their
similar pledge with the native Americans promoted peace for fifty-five years.
Thousands of copies have been distributed to schools, scout groups, etc. as
well as each new State Society member.
Click here to order copies of Pilgrims:
Then & Now