Description Plymouth is best known as the Pilgrim landing place, but history did not stop when the dishes were cleared away from the first Thanksgiving.
Harding\'s tercentenary visit to Richard Nixon\'s welcome of the Mayflower II in 1957, the best of the town\'s visual history is gathered in Plymouth..
Warren G.
From the world\'s largest rope manufactory (Plymouth Cordage) to Uncle George\'s famous woolly horse, from Water Street\'s ancient wharves and chandleries to the storm of 1898, and from Pres.
The reader will see vanished landmarks, such as the Samoset House and the Mayflower Inn, the Cornish and Burton schools, and the Leyden Street Casino.
In Plymouth, the reader will find the elm-shaded streets, mill villages, modest shops, and rustic pond-side cottages that generations of residents and visitors have loved.
Plymouth\'s intriguing past is not altogether lost.
Later, the mills closed, tourist traffic replaced the clatter of machinery, and massive housing developments transformed the town as the kaleidoscope of history turned yet again.
Steamboats and the railway brought waves of immigrants and summer visitors, transforming the small Yankee village into a bustling town.
A prosperous fishing village before the War of 1812, Plymouth developed mills and factories to line its modest brooks during the Industrial Revolution, and elegant dwellings were built to replace humble Colonial homes.
Description Plymouth is best known as the Pilgrim landing place, but history did not stop when the dishes were cleared away from the first Thanksgiving