Pilgrim Roots
Pilgrim Roots
Pilgrims’ anniversary commemorations extend into 2021. Mayflower 400 programme set to continue with postponed events. Dr Anna Scott, Heritage Consultant & Chair of the Pilgrim Roots partnership.
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ome of the events planned as part of local efforts to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the Mayflower Pilgrims’ story will now happen in 2021, so there is plenty more to look forward to and take part in. Many activities shifted online last year in response to the pandemic, including a successful stay-athome Illuminate event. For November’s Illuminate, local people were asked to share photos of homemade lanterns placed in their windows on social media using the hashtag #OneSmallCandle, inspired by a quote from Pilgrim William Bradford. People from across Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire took part, as well as from further afield, including Mayflower 400 partners in Chorley. Local schools made some impressive lanterns from glass jars, and the Pilgrim churches displayed a candle in their windows. You can also now experience the Pilgrim churches from home with new films featuring the Pilgrims’ story in a series called ‘Where it all began’, available on the Pilgrim Roots website.
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One of those churches, All Saints at Babworth, usually hosts an art exhibition supported by Bassetlaw Christian Heritage as part of the Pilgrims Festival in November, but the exhibition was hosted online instead on the Pilgrim Roots website. A range of contributions were received, including paintings, photography, poetry and embroidery, all representing an element of the Pilgrims’ story and its local connections. The Pilgrims Gallery team at Bassetlaw Museum also produced some reflections on the significance of Thanksgiving and its counterpoint, the National Day of Mourning, which has been commemorated for the past 50 years in the US by Native Americans. 2020’s commemorations have been an ideal opportunity to shed light on hidden voices and mythologised versions of the story. Rachel Carter’s ‘Pilgrim Woman’ sculpture has been wellreceived, sited on the riverside in Gainsborough looking over to Nottinghamshire. The bronze statue represents another part of the Separatists’ story which is often overlooked – women’s roles