American History Tellers - The Mayflower | The First Thanksgiving | 3
Episode Date: November 19, 2025"The winter of 1620-21 took a deadly toll on Plymouth Colony. The Pilgrims had only just begun to construct their homes when illness began spreading through the settlement. Their flimsy shelt...ers offered little protection from the freezing weather. As dysentery, pneumonia, and scurvy ravaged the colony, only a handful were left to build the settlement, care for the sick, and bury the dead. And the Pilgrims sensed that nearby Indians were waiting patiently for the right moment to strike. But they knew that if they were going to survive in the New World, they would need to befriend the Native people who had lived in the region for generations.Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now."See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Imagine it's February 1621, and you're a sailor on board the Mayflower.
The ship lies anchored in Plymouth Harbor, where it's been transformed into a sort of floating hospital.
You've lost track of how many people have died since you arrived here three months ago.
You skirt around a coughing woman and a child huddled together on a cot to find Captain Christopher Jones collecting dirty linens.
Oh, there you are, Captain.
Captain Jones gives you a brief, harried look for returning to his work.
Well, not now. I'm busy.
But Captain, you promised us we would sail back to London as soon as the colonists started building their settlement.
I have my wife, my two little boys waiting for me back home.
They'll be wondering if I'm still alive by now.
Jones drops the linens on the floor and leans against a damp wooden beam, his arms folded across his chest.
We can't leave these people when they barely managed to build a roof over their heads.
We've done the job we were hired to do.
Well, that may be true. But this ship is their only lifeline. What about our lives? You should never have let those people convalesce on board. The crew's getting sick, too. Oh, I can't just leave them stranded like this. They'll never survive. We can't set sail anyway, not until enough of the crews were covered. You throw up your arms, unable to restrain your frustration. Well, with respect, sir, if we wait any longer, there won't be any crew left to sail with. We've already lost the boatswain, the gunner, the cook, half a dozen other sailors. My God, how many more
must die before we finally leave this godforsaken place.
Captain Jones clenches his jaw, but there's no mistaking the glint of fear in his eyes.
He's worried, too.
If you want to go home so badly, why don't you make yourself useful?
Fetch some broth for these people.
Jones then stooped to pick up the linens, and you walk past him to climb up the stairs to the
galley.
You're furious to find yourself trapped in this wretched land, and you're starting to wonder
if you'll ever make it out of here alive.
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Mom and dad, uh, mom and mom, dad and dad, whatever, parents!
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From Wondery, I'm Lindsay Graham,
And this is American history tellers, our history, your story.
After arriving in New England in November 1620, the pilgrims endured a harrowing first winter in America.
They had only just begun to construct their houses when,
illness began spreading through the makeshift settlement. Most of the sick took refuge on the
Mayflower, preventing Captain Christopher Jones and his crew from making a return journey to England.
But the pilgrim struggle with hunger, disease, and bitter cold was not their only concern.
Although the landscape around them appeared desolate, they knew they were not alone.
And soon, at a moment when the colony's future hung in the balance, an unlikely visitor would
step out of the shadows. This is episode three, the first Thanksgiving.
The winter of 1620 took a grisly toll on Plymouth Colony.
As dysentery, scurvy, and pneumonia spread throughout the settlement,
six people died in December, and another eight perished in January.
And only later in that same month did the pilgrims manage to complete work on a common house,
a 20-foot square structure made out of tree trunks and branches cemented together with mud.
On Sundays, they gathered there to worship under their spiritual leader William Brue.
rooster and prey for their survival. But fighting the weather and illness meant all other construction
ground to a halt. At times, only half a dozen men and women remained on their feet, and they
were burdened with the responsibility of preparing meals, tending fires, washing clothes, and
emptying chamber pots for the rest of the colony. And as the death toll mounted, the crew of
the Mayflower grew anxious to sail back to London. Captain Christopher Jones had originally
planned to leave Plymouth as soon as the colonists found a suitable site to settle, but the illness
affecting both the settlers and his crew
caused him to delay. The Mayflower
remained anchored in Plymouth Harbor
serving as a makeshift hospital.
Meanwhile, growing fears
of an Indian attack compounded the
settler's stress. Throughout the winter,
the pilgrims heard cries in the woods
and caught glimpses of distant campfires.
They feared that Indians were watching them
waiting patiently for their numbers to dwindle
so they could mount an attack and wipe them out
completely. So to project strength,
the colonists took pains to hide their
dead, and they went so far as to prop the gravely ill against trees, placing muskets in their
hands so that they would look like sentinels guarding the settlement. Then, on February
16, 1621, one of the colonists was out hunting for ducks when he spotted 12 native men
passing nearby, with more following in the distance. He rushed back to Plymouth to raise the
alarm. The next day, the settlers organized a military force, appointing former mercenary Miles
standish as captain. The following week, the colonists began transporting cannons from the Mayflower
to one of the hills overlooking their settlement. They had brought half a dozen cannon from England
that were capable of firing up to a mile away. But even as the settlers fortified Plymouth,
some began to wonder if there would be anyone left to defend it. In February and March,
there were days when two or three colonists died. Almost everyone lost a loved one. Entire families
were wiped out, and many children were left orphaned, so that by spring, half of the original
102 settlers were dead. The onslaught of death made the safety of the tiny colony all the more
paramount. And on March 16th, as the pilgrims were discussing military matters, a lone Indian
emerged from the trees and walked boldly toward them. He was tall, with long black hair, and he wore
nothing but a leather loincloth. To the Collins' astonishment, he then greeted them in English,
declaring welcome Englishmen.
He introduced himself as Samaset
and explained that he was from an area in Maine
where English fishermen frequently visited.
It was through his dealings with them
that he learned to speak English.
Pilgrims offered Samaset brandy to drink
and he began pouring out information to them.
He spoke freely about the local geography,
tribes, and power dynamics.
He recalled previous acts of violence
committed by English explorers against local Indians
and informed them that their settlement
was on the grounds of a village known as Possible.
Tuxet, which had been decimated by a recent epidemic. Then he said he had been sent by the most
powerful native leader in the region, a man named Massasoit. Massasoit was the great sachem,
a term for chief or leader of the Wampanag people. He lived in a place called Poconoka,
about 40 miles to the southwest. As the conversation wore on, night fell, and Samaset insisted
on staying. Despite the colonists' wariness, they offered him shelter and food, and he left the next
morning, promising to return soon.
Samisette's visit was the first the colonnets had ever heard of the Seychum Massasoit,
but all winter, Massasoit had been closely monitoring the struggling pilgrims from afar.
He saw that their situation was as desperate as his home,
and while the pilgrims were reeling from a devastating winter,
Massasoit had seen his people, the Wampanog, ravaged by the recent epidemic,
spread by European fishermen.
A thriving population of 12,000 had been reduced to only a few hundred.
This overwhelming loss left the Wampanog vulnerable to their chief enemies the Narragansett
and the West in modern-day Rhode Island, because while the epidemic decimated the Wampanok,
the Narraganset were left relatively untouched. They numbered 20,000 people, including 5,000
warriors. But Massasoit was not without allies. He fought to counter the dominance of the
Narragansett by forging alliances with other tribes, the Massachusetts of the north, and the
Nosset to the east on Cape Cod. And as Mesasoit took stock,
of the Pilgrims, he observed that, unlike previous European visitors, they had brought women
and children along with them, and they were building homes rather than attempting to make
trades. It was obvious that these new arrivals planned to stay. But rather than attack,
Massasso had hesitated. Only a year had passed since a group of English sailors had slaughtered
some of his people, and he remained wary of Englishmen. So as he considered his options,
he consulted with an English-speaking Indian named Squanto. Squanto was a Wampanog Indian who had
kidnapped by an English explorer in 1614. He spent the next five years in Newfoundland,
Spain and England. In 1619, he finally returned to New England alongside an English explorer
named Thomas Dermer, only to find his village Pawtuxet ravaged by a recent epidemic,
with only a few survivors remaining. It was the same site where the Pilgrims were now building
Plymouth. But soon after Thomas Dermer and Squanto arrived in New England,
local tribes sought revenge for earlier English violence.
Dermar's party was attacked and nearly wiped out,
and Squanto was captured once again.
By the fall of 1620, he was living with Massasoit and the Wampanog in Pocanoket.
After his years with the English, he spoke the language well
and offered Massasote his skills as an interpreter.
But even though Squanto was a member of his tribe,
Massasoit looked at Squanto with suspicion.
He knew that if the English gained a foothold in the region,
anyone who could speak their language would have a powerful advantage.
They would be able to make claims about what the English were saying,
and no one would know whether they were telling the truth.
And after years of devastating loss, the stakes were high.
Massasso it harbored doubts about where Squanto's loyalties truly lay.
Imagine it's mid-March, 1620, in the village of Pocanokut.
You're the sachem of the Wampanog people,
and you've invited Squanto and Jira Wigwam to advise you what to do.
do about the English. He knows these men, their language, and their ways better than anyone,
but you're not sure you can trust him. The fire crackles low at your feet, and you stare at him,
through the smoke curling its way up to the hole in the ceiling. You raise an eyebrow as you
address Squanto. So why shouldn't we strike these Englishmen now? Their weapons may be powerful,
but their numbers are pitiful. They've only managed to build a few crude structures to protect them.
They wouldn't stand a chance. Squanto leans forward the firelight reflecting in his gaze.
that's because they are a weak that you must not attack. The English are no danger to us now.
They're too busy trying to survive. They have no crops eat. They can barely dig up
enough shellfish from the mud to stave off hunger. Yes, but weakness does not mean
they come in peace. We've seen too much of their kind to expect anything but treachery.
It was only a year ago, remember, that English sailors lured our people onto their ship
and killed them without reason. Why should I believe these Englishmen are any different?
Well, you must consider your own position. The Narragansic grow more powerful by the day,
and we cannot resist them alone.
But maybe if we befriend the English and make use of their guns and cannons,
then the Narragansit will think twice before attacking us.
Yes, I've thought of this.
The English weapons would give us an advantage.
And that's not all.
The English have the power to unleash disease upon anyone they wish.
You must befriend them if you want to avoid their wrath.
You know this to be true?
I've lived among them.
I've seen their power.
Please let me go to them and invite their friendship.
You know that I speak their tongue better than anyone.
You study, Squanto, for a long moment.
but his expression is unreadable.
Still his logic is beginning to make sense to you.
All right, but we will go to them.
Together.
We'll leave at first like tomorrow.
Squanto bows his head in agreement.
You're still not sure whose side he's on.
His ability to speak their language gives him a unique advantage,
but despite the risk, you know he's right.
An alliance with the English may be the only way to ensure your people endure.
In March 1621, Squanto exploited Massasoit's paranoia to convince him to seek friendship with the English.
He warned him that the pilgrims not only possessed muskets and cannons, but insisted that they had the power to unleash plague on their enemies.
He also argued that allying with the English could help Massasoit overpower their enemy, the Narragansa tribe.
But to seek an alliance with the English, Massasoit needed an intermediary. He had sent the
English-speaking Sammaset to Plymouth as a first step. Now he would reluctantly rely on Squanto,
who was a local man and a much better English speaker with direct knowledge of English culture
after having lived in captivity in London. So on March 22nd, Sammaset returned to Plymouth with Squanto
by his side. Squanto spoke with ease about his life in England and quickly earned the Pilgrim's
trust. Then he announced that Massasoit, the leader of the Wampanog tribe, was nearby. And right
on cue, Massasota appeared on the hill above the settlement. His face was painted in dark red,
and he wore a necklace of white shell beads with a long knife suspended from a string.
Beside him was an entourage of sixty armed warriors painted in vivid colors. It was an
intimidating display that made for a powerful contrast to the pilgrims. By then, fewer than
twenty adult men were left in Plymouth. Squanto then relayed the message that Massasoit
wanted an English envoy to speak with him. A pilgrim leader named Edward
Winslow agreed to go. After donning armor and a sword, he walked up the hill with Squanto to meet
Massasoit. Winslow began by giving Massasote a pair of knives, some copper chains, alcohol, and a few
biscuits. Then he delivered a brief speech, offering a message of friendship on behalf of the English
King James. Massasoit responded positively, and Winslow invited the sachem to the settlement for a more
formal meeting with the colonies governor, John Carver. So Massasoit went down to Plymouth with 20 men by
his side. The pilgrims mustered as much pomp and circumstances as they could, beating drums and
blaring trumpets. Carver then invited Massasote into a half-built house where the two leaders sat down
on a rug spread over the dirt floor. After sharing food and liquor, they got down to business and
struck a peace agreement. They promised not to harm each other's people and come to each other's
aid in the event of an attack. They also agreed that Squanto would stay with the struggling pilgrims
to help them with spring planting. After five months,
of loss in uncertainty. The Pilgrims had secured a peace pact with a man who appeared to rule
a large swath of New England. It was a remarkable turn of events that seemed to bode well
for the Pilgrim's future, but it would not be too long before the alliance would be put to the test.
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I'm Razor Jafri, and in the latest season of The Spy Who,
we open the file on Morton Storm, the Spy Who lived inside Al-Qaeda.
Unfulfilled with his life in a notorious Danish biker gang, Morton's storm is lost.
One afternoon he stumbles into a library looking for answers.
He finds them in the form of a book about Islam.
The towering ginger-haired Dane doesn't know it yet,
but that moment will hurl him into a world of radicalism
and see him rise through the ranks of militant Islamist organization, al-Qaeda,
only to suffer a huge crisis of faith.
He turns from devotee to spy,
tasked with rooting out some of al-Qaeda's most feared generals.
The CIA and MI5 bid for his allegiance
as he loses himself in a life of cash-laden suitcases,
double crosses and betrayal.
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On April 5, 1621, the Pilgrims bid farewell to Captain Christopher Jones and the crew of the Mayflower
as they began their journey back across the Atlantic. The warmer spring weather had allowed the death
rate in Plymouth to finally subside, and Jones felt it was at last time to return to England.
But he would be sailing with a severely diminished crew. Half of the 35 sailors who had journeyed to
America had died that winter. And although the Pilgrims had planned to load the ship with goods
to satisfy their investors, their struggles over the winter had made that impossible.
The Mayflower, therefore, set sail for England with nothing but a pile of ballast stones
taken from the shore of Plymouth Harbor.
Strong westerly winds would carry the ship to London in just one short month, less than
half the time it took to sail to America.
But Captain Jones's health had deteriorated during his time in New England, and he would die
less than a year later, leaving the Mayflower anchored on the banks of the Thames.
In the end, the ship that carried the pilgrims on their history.
historic voyage would be sold for scrap. But for the pilgrims, after the departure of the Mayflower,
it was more important than ever to secure a reliable food supply. Fortunately, after agreeing to a
peace pact with the Wampanak, they now had the help of the English-speaking Squanto who had come
to live with them. Almost immediately, he won over the pilgrims by bringing them a new food source.
Waiting into a nearby tidal creek, he used his feet to squeeze eels out of the mud,
gathering up so many that he could barely carry them all back to Plymouth.
The colonists happily ate them, praising them as fat and sweet.
Then as spring went on, Squanto gave the pilgrims a rapid lesson in native agriculture.
Under his careful supervision, they planted the corn seed that they had stolen the previous
December. The land surrounding Plymouth was poor, though, so Squanto showed them how to fertilize
the soil with dead herring. And once the corn sprouted, he had them add squash and beans.
As the squash and bean creepers climbed up the cornstalks, they shaded the roots from the summer
sun and prevented weeds from sprouting.
Thanks to Squanto, the native crops thrived, while the barley and peas the colonists had brought
from England struggled to take root in the foreign soil.
And as was typical for the Puritans, colonist William Bradford interpreted Squanto's arrival
as an act of divine providence, writing that he was a special instrument sent from God
for our good.
But that spring wasn't all good tidings.
In April, Plymouth's Governor John Carver was working in the fields when he started complaining
of a sudden headache. He went home to lie down and then lapsed into a coma. Only a few days later,
he was dead. It was yet another devastating loss at a time when the colonists were only just
beginning to recover from a harrowing winter. Supplies were still low. No cargo had been sent back to
England, and tensions were flaring within the settlement. The pilgrims needed a strong and
unifying leader. They decided that 31-year-old William Bradford fit the bill and elected him as
governor. In his new position that summer, Bradford decided it was time to establish trade relations with
nearby Indian tribes. His first priority was strengthening their alliance with the Massasoit and the
Wampanog, so in July he sent a delegation to visit them in the town of Poconokit, 40 miles to the
southwest. That same month, the Pilgrims established peaceful relations with the Indians to the east,
a tribe known as the Nosset. By then, the pilgrims had learned that the Nosset were the owners of the
corn that they had stolen upon their arrival in Cape Cod the previous winter. In late July,
1621, the Nosset captured a 16-year-old pilgrim who had gotten lost in the woods.
Governor Bradford dispatched a rescue party, led by Squanto, who secured the boy's release in exchange
for a knife. The pilgrims then also promised to reimburse the Nosset for the stolen corn
and the two groups declared peace. So by that August,
The pilgrims believed that their colony was finally beginning to find its footing until they received troubling news.
One of Massasoit's men brought word that an ambitious Wampidog leader named Corbatant had kidnapped and possibly killed Squanto.
Although Corbatant served under Massasoit, he opposed Massesot's treaty with the pilgrims.
He hoped that by abducting the pilgrim's trusted interpreter and guide, he could end Massasoit's alliance with the English.
As Corbitant explained, if Squanto were killed, the English would lose their tongue.
And once they did, he would seize power for himself.
Imagine it's August 1621 in Plymouth.
You're the military leader of the colony,
and you and five other men are crammed into Governor William Bradford's house.
You've learned that your trusted interpreter Squanto
has been kidnapped by the Sachem Corbitant
as being held 15 miles away in the Indian village of Namasket.
Bradford has called a meeting of his closest advisors to decide on the plan, and you're one of them.
You lean forward, pressing your palms flat against the rough-hewn table.
I believe we must take immediate and forceful action.
If we don't act fast, Guantan could be killed.
The separatist elder William Brewster rubs his temple and shakes his head.
We must not be so hasty.
It would be unwise to provoke a wider conflict.
Do you mean to bring the whole region against us?
Well, better war than weakness, surely.
You may lead the church, but you have little understanding of military strategy.
Corpant needs to know that he cannot challenge us without consequences.
and our ally, Massasoit, needs to know that we won't stand by why one of his men betrays him.
So what do you propose we do?
We gather ten men and lead them to Namasket.
As Squanto is still alive, we'll bring him home.
But if he's dead, and I will seize Corpident himself, give him a punishment fit for a traitor.
I'll cut off his head and bring it back to Plymouth, planted on our gates so that no one will doubt our resolve.
Brewster visibly recoils his mouth falling open.
You suggest we mimic the savagery of our enemies.
I suggest we follow the words of Scripture, Elder Brewster.
Remember Joshua, who brought down the walls of Jericho and destroyed every living thing inside them?
But we're only just getting on our feet.
There are so few of us and so many of them.
You pound your fists on the table, your anger getting the better of you.
Which is why we must go to Namask it.
These people think we are feeble.
It's time we assert our power.
Governor Bradford leans back in the
chair and rubs his chin. Then he announces that you are to go to the
basket and rescues Squanto, adding that if he's already dead, and you will know
what to do. Brewster bows his head, his lips moving in silent prayer, but you
rise to your feet and nodded Bradford, your heart pounding. This is the moment you've
been preparing for, a chance to finally show the Indians your strength.
After learning that Squanto had been kidnapped, Plymouth's Governor William Bradford
consulted his closest advisors, including the colony's military leader Miles Standish.
Terrified by the idea of losing his trusted interpreter and guide, Bradford agreed with
Stanish's recommendation that the Pilgrims act quickly and decisively. He also hoped to prove
the pilgrim's loyalty to Massasoit. He later explained the wider strategic importance
of the decision, declaring that if they allowed their allies to be mistreated without consequence,
the Pilgrims would be isolated, cut off from all information, and left vulnerable to future attacks.
The next morning, August 14, 1621, Stanish led ten men on a 15-mile march to the village of
Damascus. Arriving at midnight, Stanish burst into a wigwam and demanded to know where Corbatant was.
While the terrified people inside the wigwam screamed and wept, the pilgrims outside fired their muskets,
wounding two villagers. Then they discovered Squanto was alive and well, but Corbantant was nowhere
to be found. The next morning, Stanish gave a stern warning to the villagers,
treated the wounded, and then he and his men returned with Squanto to Plymouth.
This bold display of military resolve earned the pilgrim's newfound respect among surrounding tribes.
On September 13th, nine sachems, including Corbitant, traveled to Plymouth to sign a treaty
professing their loyalty to King James.
So as tension subsided, the colonists turned their attention back to the more urgent work
of building their town. By October, they had finished 11 crude structures,
seven homes and four common buildings. And because of Squanto's help, they managed to reap a successful
harvest. It was also a time when large numbers of migrating birds frequented the area.
Governor Bradford ordered four men to go hunting, and in just a few hours they had killed
enough ducks and geese to feed the settlement for weeks. Bradford declared that they had now
gathered the fruit of our labors, and it was time to rejoice together. But around that same time,
Massasoit and 90 Wampanog men arrived in Plymouth uninvited,
but they brought with them several deer to add to the spread,
and over the next three days,
the two groups enjoyed a harvest celebration marked by feasting and games.
Subsequent generations of New Englanders would recast this event as the first Thanksgiving,
a watershed moment of English-Indian unity.
But the pilgrims themselves never used the term Thanksgiving,
and unlike later depictions, it was an entirely informal event.
There was no long table or silverware.
Instead, the pilgrims and Indians most likely stood, squatted, or sat on the ground.
The pilgrims also made almost no mention of the festivities in their writings
beyond a single two-sentence description.
Still, for years to come, the story of the feast would capture the American imagination.
This harvest celebration marked the end of an extraordinary year.
Just 11 months earlier, the pilgrims had arrived in New England wholly unprepared for the brutal winter ahead.
Half of them had died, what against all odds the settlement survived, in large part due to their willingness to adapt to their new environment and its existing power dynamics.
They had established trade relations, demonstrated their strength, and cemented a diplomatic alliance to help ensure their safety.
But challenges still remained.
The Pilgrims had entered a harsh and uncertain world where multiple groups were vying for power.
And soon, one of their most trusted allies would make a move to undo everything they had built.
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In the fall of 1620,
a battered merchant ship called the Mayflower
set sail across the Atlantic. It carried 102 men, women, and children, risking it all to start
again in the new world. Hi, I'm Lindsay Graham, the host of American history tellers. Every week
we take you through the moments that shaped America, and in our latest season, we explore the
untold story of the Pilgrims, one that goes far beyond the familiar tale of the first Thanksgiving.
After landing at Cape Cod, the Pilgrims forged an unlikely alliance with the Wopinog people
who helped the pilgrims survive the most brutal winter they'd ever known, laying the foundation,
for a powerful national myth.
But behind that story lies another,
one of conflict, betrayal,
and brutal violence against the very people
who help the Pilgrim survive.
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On November 9th, 1620,
a lookout spotted a small ship in Plymouth Harbor. It was the first vessel the colonists had seen since the Mayflower left their shores six months earlier. And although they initially feared they were under attack by French pirates, it turned out to be an English relief ship called the Fortune. It was sent by their London broker Thomas Weston, the man chiefly responsible for recruiting investors for Plymouth, and with the arrival of the fortune, the size of the colony doubled in an instant. But much to Governor William Bradford's frustration, the small
vessel brought 37 colonists that he would now have to house and feed just as winter was about to
set in. Even worse, the fortune carried no additional provisions, and only a handful of the new
arrivals were Puritan separatists who shared the same religious beliefs as the colony's leaders.
The rest were strangers. But the good news was that most of the newcomers were young men who could
help with Plymouth's labor needs. There were now 66 men and 16 women in the colony, and this
six-to-one ratio of eligible men to eligible women, placed intense pressure on orphaned teenage
girls to marry. Colonists who had been widowed also quickly remarried. But the new ship not only
brought new settlers, it also delivered a furious letter from Thomas Weston, rebuking the pilgrims
for failing to load the Mayflower with cargo before it left London. He wrote, I know your weakness
was the cause of it, and I believe more weakness of judgment than weakness of hands. Despite his
criticism, Weston nevertheless pledged his loyalty, promising the pilgrims that they could count on
him. But Bradford was outraged by the accusations. He pointed out that while the investors risked their
money, the pilgrims had risked their lives. Nevertheless, they still had a debt to pay. So when
the fortune prepared to head back to London in December, the pilgrims loaded it with beaver skins,
sassafras, and split oak. The value of the cargo totaled nearly 500 pounds, almost half of what
the colonists owed Weston and other investors. So with this, the Pilgrims had taken a major step
in easing their debt, but they soon faced another crisis, the potential for an attack by the
powerful Narragansett tribe, the chief enemies of the Pilgrim's Wampanog allies. The alliance
between the English and the Wampanog posed a threat to the Narragansett, and later that year,
the leader of the Narragansett set a symbolic challenge to Plymouth, a bundle of arrows
wrapped in the skin of a rattlesnake. Bradford responded by stuffing the snake-skin with gun
powder and bullets, and sending it back to the Narragansett-Sacham. It seemed to have the desired
effect. One colonist reported, it was no small terror to the savage king, in so much as he would not
once touch the powder and shot, or suffer it to stay in his house or country. But as December
wore on, the pilgrims continued to worry about potential threats. To safeguard Plymouth, Bradford and the
colony's military leader, Captain Miles Stanish, ordered the construction of an eight-foot-high timber
wall around the settlement. To defend both the cannons on Fort Hill and the houses on the
adjacent Coal Hill, the wall would need to be more than half a mile long. But there were only a few
dozen able-bodied men to perform the back-breaking work of building the wall, and the task was
made harder by the pilgrim's poor tools, lack of oxen and low rations. It was a project that demanded
unity and discipline, but tensions were flaring between the original settlers and the new arrivals
from the fortune.
Imagine it's Christmas Day, 1621, in Plymouth.
You've recently arrived here from England, and you and some of your fellow colonists
are enjoying a day of leisure after spending the past few weeks building a wall around the settlement.
They're playing stoolball, a Christmas tradition that you cherish back in England,
and you've begun to feel more at home here than you have in weeks
as you step up to the bat and squint against the sun waiting for the pitch.
You swing and hit the ball with a satisfying crack.
But then you freeze in your tracks as you see Governor Warrer,
William Bradford striding toward you with a furious look on his face.
What do you think you're doing? You know, when you and the other strangers insisted that it was
against your conscience to work on Christmas, I begrudgingly gave you the day off to rest, and I am
more than willing to let you spend Christmas praying quietly at home, but I won't allow
reveling in the streets. You lift your bat across your shoulder and draw a shaky breath.
Well, but sir, I've played stoolball on Christmas for as long as I can remember. It's a tradition.
Well, that may be true, but it's no way for members of a god.
oddly Puritan community to conduct themselves.
Radford's hand shoots forward, and before you can react,
he wrenches the bat from your grasp.
All right, now gather up the balls. This game ends now.
The boys around you silently obey, but you can feel heat rising in your chest.
Oh, Governor, please. This one game couldn't hurt, could it?
It's what we always do, back home in England.
Well, son, you are no longer in England. You're in Plymouth,
which operates by its own God-ordained rules, and everyone, including you, is expected
to conform.
God, well, has it ever occurred to you that this intolerance
is exactly what drove you from England in the first place?
Bradford's eyes blaze.
This is not about tolerance or freedom.
It's about right or wrong.
Bradford turns and walks away.
Your bat tucked firmly under his arm.
Only a few minutes ago, the street was alive with laughter and play.
But now feels as though Bradford has drained all the joy from Christmas.
William Bradford and his fellow Puritan separatists sought to strip Christianity of all rituals and traditions not found in the Bible.
They saw no justification for Christmas festivities in the Bible, so they refused to celebrate the holiday.
But while they treated December 25th like any other day, the new so-called strangers in the colony who did not share their religious beliefs refused to work and instead of resting quietly, play games in the street.
Radford confiscated their games, viewing them as an affront to the Puritan's desire to create a godly community.
But although this conflict over Christmas revealed deep and lingering tensions within the settlement,
the more immediate problem of defense demanded the colonists' attention.
In March 1622, construction on the new wall around Plymouth was finally complete,
and Miles Standish organized the men into defensive units and began drilling them regularly.
The pilgrims had made it clear to anyone watching that they had no plans to leave.
But soon a new threat appeared, and this time from within.
In April 1622, Standish planned a trading expedition near modern-day Boston.
He and his men had begun sailing north when a relative of Squanto came running down the beach.
He claimed that Massasoit and the Wampanog had joined forces with their enemies to Narragansett
and were preparing an imminent attack on Plymouth.
The story was suspect, though, given the Wampanog's longtime alliance with the Pilgrims
and rivalry with the Narraganset, but,
Bradford ordered the cannons fired as a warning signal to the Pilgrims,
and Standish, who was still in earshot, turned his boat around,
returning to Plymouth to prepare for battle.
But before making any rash decisions, Bradford consulted with Hobamock,
a trusted aide of Massasoit, who had been sent to live with the pilgrims
to keep an eye on Squanto.
Habamock was also highly suspicious of the claims,
and he sent his wife to Massasoit's village to investigate.
When Massasoit heard the story, he was outraged
and denied any hostile intent toward the pilgrim.
but the story seemed to confirm his distrust of Squanto.
The full truth emerged over the next few weeks.
The pilgrims learned that Squanto quietly coveted his own chieftain
and had been spreading rumors that the pilgrims had the power to unleash plagues on their
enemies, so he promised to protect native villages in exchange for tributes.
Growing numbers of local Indians had begun to look to Squanto for protection instead
of Massasoit, and Squanto had fabricated the story of Massasoit, planning an attack on Plymouth
could try to drive a wedge between the two allies.
So in May 1622, a furious Massasuit sent messengers to Plymouth, demanding Squanto's
death. Governor Bradford stalled, torn between his alliance with Massasuit and his close
friendship with Squanto. The pilgrims had come to depend on Squanto, and Bradford could not
bear the thought of losing his interpreter who had become a lifeline for the colony.
But just as Massasoit's warriors arrived to execute the death sentence, white sails appeared
on the horizon.
Governor Bradford told the warriors he feared it could be the French
and declared that he refused to surrender Squanto
until after he found out whether enemies were approaching.
The warriors left in frustration, and Squanto was spared.
But Bradford would soon discover that the biggest threat to the colony
was not his compromised friend,
but the ship entering the harbor.
And soon, Plymouth would face its gravest challenge yet.
From Wondery, this is episode three of our four-part series,
The Mayflower, from American History Telling.
In the next episode, a new rival colony puts unprecedented strain on the pilgrims' resources.
Rumors spread of a planned attack on Plymouth, prompting the pilgrims to make a controversial move,
one that would transform the balance of power in New England.
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American History Tellers is hosted, edited and produced by me, Lindsay Graham for Airship.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazi, sound design by Molly Bach, music by Thrum.
This episode is written by Ellie Stanton, edited by Dorian Marina, senior producer Andy Beckerman.
Executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman and Marshal Louis for Wondry.
Wonder.
