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| by Peggy M. Baker,
Director & Librarian Pilgrim Society & Pilgrim Hall Museum |
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| Between 1765
and 1775, the allegiance and self-identity of the American colonists radically changed.
In an amazingly short period of time, previously loyal English
citizens became armed rebels refusing to acknowledge the sovereignty of
the crown. These were years of turbulence and confusion. The choices to be made were not clear or simple. As the possibility of an armed conflict loomed, Americans became more and more clearly divided in their choices and the "sides" became more distinct and eventually hostile. Even communities as small and tightly-knit as Plymouth were torn apart. The division within the town is clearly illustrated in the records of Plymouth's Old Colony Club, records preserved in the Archives of the Pilgrim Society at Pilgrim Hall Museum. The Old Colony Club was founded in January 1769 to provide a place for a small group of Plymouth's better educated and more cosmopolitan young men to congregate (separate from the taverns) "to increase not only the pleasure and happiness of the respective members, but also will conduce to their edification and instruction." There were seven founding members: Elkanah Cushman, Isaac Lothrop (club president), Thomas Lothrop, John Thomas, John Watson, Edward Winslow Junior and Pelham Winslow. Four were Harvard graduates. Two were attorneys, one a customs officer, four were young men of business. Five additional members were elected subsequently: Captain Samuel Adams, Oakes Angier, Thomas Mayhew Junior, Alexander Scammell and Cornelius White. This new group included two more Harvard graduates and, in addition to another lawyer and another man of business, added two sea captains and a schoolteacher to the membership. The first major even in the short history of the Old Colony Club was the decision to celebrate what we now call Forefathers Day, the anniversary of the day the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock. The Old Colony Club was the first organization to celebrate the landing of the Pilgrims. On December 22, 1769, the members gathered in the morning to discharge a cannon. After a midday dinner (which included succotash), they marched to their meeting hall where they were joined by a number of male guests. A series of toasts was offered, beginning with praise for the Pilgrims and proceeding to political commentary. The toasts clearly indicate that the Club was united both in its firm displeasure with the "burdens and oppressions" being suffered by the Colonies at the hands of Parliament, and in the desire for a peaceful solution and a "speedy and lasting union between Great Britain and her Colonies."
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| The Forefathers day sermon by Rev. Turner
was delivered as planned, on December 22, 1773. Yearly celebrations
of Forefathers day continued to be held until 1780. These later
celebrations were sponsored by the town, however. There is no record
that the Old Colony Club met after December 22, 1773. We know the outcome for the American colonies in the years that followed 1773. Tensions continued to grow, armed conflict erupted in 1775 and America fought for 8 long years before finally establishing its independence. What was the outcome for the 12 young men of the Old Colony Club? |
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| After 1780, the celebration of
Forefathers Day in Plymouth went into abeyance. When the tradition
was revived by the town in 1794, only two Old Colony Club men, Isaac
Lothrop and John Watson, were alive and in Plymouth. Twenty-five
years later, in 1819, a new society was formed "to commemorate the
landing of the Fathers in the town of Plymouth." The first name
considered for the new society was the "Old Colony Pilgrim
Society," acknowledging its predecessor Old Colony Club. The
name finally chosen, however, was simply the "Pilgrim
Society." John Watson, the "quiet Loyalist" and the
last surviving Plymouth member of the Old Colony Club, was elected
Vice-President of the Pilgrim Society and presided over the first
celebration of Forefathers Day held by the Society on December 22, 1820. In a gesture to repair the political rift that had led to the demise of the original Old Colony Club, the Trustees of the Pilgrim Society voted on December 12, 1820, to offer honorary membership in the Pilgrim Society to Loyalist John Thomas, Esquire, Liverpool [Nova Scotia] because of he was "formerly [a] member of the Old Colony Club of 1769." |
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Today both organizations exist and honor the Pilgrims. The Pilgrim Society was formed in 1820 and continues today; it also continues to commemorate Forefathers Day - but not on December 22! In the later 19th century, rectifying an early calendar error, the date of the actual landing of the Pilgrims was determined to be December 21 and the Pilgrim Society changed the date of its celebration accordingly (although when the date falls on a Sunday, the celebration is held on December 20). Membership in the Pilgrim Society is not based on lineage, the Society welcomes all who wish the Pilgrim story to be preserved and commemorated. The Old Colony Club, resurrected in 1875, remains a private men's club. It commemorates Forefathers Day on December 22, as did the original Old Colony Club (although when the date falls on a Sunday, the celebration is held on December 23). The public is welcome at the Club's yearly December 22 Forefathers Day sunrise cannon volley on Plymouth's Coles Hill. |
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Updated 14 July, 1998