The year was 1620.
The Pilgrims set sail on the Mayflower on September 16, 1620, from Plymouth, England. The 102 passengers along with around 30 crew members arrived in the New World in November, 1620.
== == == == The pilgrims first landed on plymoth in 1620!!!!!!!!!
The Pilgrims set sail to American from the country of England. They came to America in 1620 and founded the Plymouth Colony.
The Mayflower set sail for America from Plymouth, England on June 6, 1620. The 100 foot ship carried 102 passengers and 30 crew members. The Mayflower landed at Cape Cod sometime around November 15, 1620.
In 1620, the Mayflower set sail to America, hosting Puritans who aimed to establish a new, separate colony from the others. This colony was later named the Plymouth Colony because they landed on a land-form which was named Plymouth Rock (the rock can now be seen in Plymouth, Massachusetts).
They hired the Speedwell in Holland and hired the Mayflower at London, although it was berthed at Southampton. The two ships set sail from Southampton, around August 5, 1620. It soon became evident that the Speedwell was leaking and not seaworthy, so they turned back and put in at Plymouth (in Devon, England). There, some Pilgrims transferred themselves and their goods to the Mayflower and some stayed behind. The Mayflower set sail from the port at Plymouth on September 6, 1620 and arrived at the tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, on November 11th; a voyage of 65 days.
That all depends on the type of boat that you are using.
The Puritans didn't go to Plymouth, they went to what is now Massachusetts Bay colony. They founded Plymouth, MA in 1620. Named after Plymouth, Devon, England, from whence the Mayflower set sail, it is the oldest continuously populated English settlement in the modern US.
The Mayflower originally departed from the English port of Southampton in August 1620, accompanied by a smaller vessel the Speedwell. Because the Speedwell was leaking, the ships were forced to return first to Dartmouth and then to Plymouth.The Mayflower finally set sail alone from Plymouth, England, in September 1620 for the 66-day voyage to the American site that the Puritan settlers also named Plymouth.
Queen Elizabeth I commissioned tree men to sail around the world in 1577. They were Sir Drake Francis, John Winter, and Thomas Doughty. The Queen's Corsair set sail from Plymouth to the Spanish-controlled Rock of Gibraltar.
1620