Pilgrims without faces

Pilgrims without faces

They’re not in the family albums…

 

 

I guess only American kids who are too young for preschool have never seen a picture of the Pilgrims who went ashore in Cape Cod Bay in November 1620.

There were 102 passengers on the Mayflower. Maybe you know that only about half of them were religious Separatists, the refugees from persecution in England that we now know as Pilgrims. Many in the other half came, for non-religious reasons, to what no one was yet calling “New England.”

The “Pilgrim” image is so well known I won’t annoy you with an extended description. You know, the black hat with the buckle, the fowling piece with a bulge at the end of the barrel, the (arguably apocryphal) Thanksgiving scene with Indians and overflowing tables and rosy-cheeked women and kids having a good time…

Here’s a thing: more or less, we don’t know what the Pilgrims looked like. There is only one surviving portrait (Edward Winslow) of those hardy pioneers. Francis Dillon, in his book The Pilgrims, says that the surviving first-person accounts include a description of someone’s beard, and a reference to the height and hair color of one man.

Otherwise, nada. Of course, no selfies. Nothing on YouTube. No family albums.

How many people alive right now in America have never been photographed?

Four hundred years from now, it’s a good bet that someone will be able to figure out how good looking you are right now.

 

Source:

The Pilgrims, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1975

by Francis Dillon

from the Preface

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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2026 All rights reserved.

 

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