Looked seven years after mayflower landed. When our guests enter the Historic Site the encounter living history educators who are portraying men and women who lived in plymouth in 1627. We know the name of every man, woman and child that was here because this is the last year that they live within the walled town. In 1620 they started spreading up and down the coast. And so to divide all of their Common Assets equitably they needed a complete list of residence. Every person that our guests encountered once actually walked they of the earth. When you come to a Living Museum you enter into another world. You are able to encounter the spiritual belief of the past and technology of the past, the experiments itself in three dimensions. And one of the things that we strive to deal is hold the people of the past in our hands were gently and with compassion so we can enter into their story and experiencing it in 360 degrees. The 360 degrees surrounding the right now behind me, you can see the
Executive director at plymouth museums and we are in the 17th century English Village. A recreation of plymouth as it looks seven years after mayflower landed. When our guests enter the historic site, the encounter living history educators who are portraying men and women who lived in plymouth in 1627. We know the name of every man, woman and child who was here because this is the last that they lived with in the town in 1620, we started spreading up and have been down to divide all of the Common Assets equitably, they needed a complete list of residents. Every person that our guests encounter, once actually walked on the face of the earth. No one fictional, no one composite. When you come to a Living Museum you enter into unable to encounter the spiritual beliefs or the, past the technology of the past, the experiments in Self Governance of the past in three dimensions. And one of the things that we strive to do is hold the people of the past in our hands very gently and with compassi
“Why Me, Mama?” a picture book about differences by Sandwich resident Katie Lockwood, is now out in hardcover. The book was conceived by Ms. Lockwood as a way to support