In 1620, a group of separatists led by a man named William Bradford left port in Plymouth, England headed for a landmass on the other side of an ocean very few had crossed. These separatists were English protestants, leaving friends and family because they did not want to declare allegiance to the Church of England. After two months of chaos and death at sea, the group found their way to Cape Cod and called their new home Plymouth. The colonists then spent the winter on their boat called the Mayflower, where only half of the crew survived the harsh New England winter. Then the captain of the Mayflower sailed it back to England and the colonists were forced to settle onshore. The colonists would have died had it not been for an English-speaking Native American named Samoset who taught the colonists how to hunt, fish, and grow crops. At the end of the following summer, the colonists held a celebration for their successful harvest, a three-day event called the festival ...