






Annuleer ten minste 24 uur voor de geplande vertrektijd om een volledige restitutie te ontvangen.
6 uur
Plymouth Colony komt tot leven in onze recreatie van het vroege Plymouth, compleet met vakwerkhuizen ingericht met reproducties van de soorten objecten die de Pilgrims bezaten, aromatische moestuinen en erfgoed rassen vee.
Op The Patuxet Homesite leer je over het inheemse erfgoed van de 17e-eeuwse levenswegen van een cultuur die...
Historic Patuxet Homesite is where guests learn about the
The 17th-Century English Village
A re-creation of the small farming and maritime community built by the Pilgrims along the shore of Plymouth Harbor.
Historic Patuxet Homesite
Historic Patuxet Homesite is where guests learn about the Native peoples who have lived here...
Sgt. William Harlow built the house in 1677 for his family of 10, and worked as a cooper, farmer, and soldier. In 1676, Harlow was granted permission to salvage material from the fort house on Burial Hill to use in the construction of his new dwelling. From the early 19th...
The Jabez Howland House is the only existing house in Plymouth where Pilgrims actually spent time. The original 17th century two-story timber framed house consisted of the porch, hall and hall chamber. Jabez Howland, John and Elizabeth’s son, lived here with his family.
Mayflower II is Plimoth's full-scale reproduction of the tall ship that brought the Pilgrims to Plymouth in 1620.
Built in 1749 for the widow Hannah Jackson, the Spooner House is one of the oldest structures on Plymouth's picturesque North Street. It was home to one Plymouth family, the Spooners, for over two hundred years. The first Spooner to occupy the house was Deacon Ephraim Spooner, a successful local...
Built in 1749, the two-story wood-frame building is believed to be the oldest wooden courthouse in the United States; it stands on the site of the first courthouse built by Plymouth Colony settlers, and may incorporate elements of a 1670 building. The site was originally the site of Edward Winslow's...
The congregation was formed in the English village of Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, around 1607 by the Pilgrim Fathers, a group of exiled dissenting Puritans in the Dutch Republic. After they emigrated to America in 1620, the congregation built a chapel in Plymouth which became a parish church of Massachusetts' state church,...
Burial Hill is a historic cemetery or burying ground on School Street in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Established in the 17th century, it is the burial site of several Pilgrims, the founding settlers of Plymouth Colony.
The oldest surviving house in Plymouth, The Richard Sparrow House was constructed around the year 1640 by its namesake, Richard Sparrow. An English surveyor, Sparrow arrived in Plymouth in 1636 and played a significant role in the early development of the area.
Plimoth Grist Mill tells the story of the grist (corn grinding) mill built by the Pilgrims in Plymouth Colony.
Formerly known as the Pilgrim Monument, commemorates the Mayflower Pilgrims. Dedicated on August 1, 1889, it honors their ideals as later generally embraced by the United States. It is thought to be the world's largest solid granite monument.
Annuleer ten minste 24 uur voor de geplande vertrektijd om een volledige restitutie te ontvangen.
We konden geen beoordelingen voor dit product vinden.
TourScanner doet dienst als betalingsfacilitator, maar de geregistreerde handelaar is Viator. De prijs en voorwaarden zijn hetzelfde.
Klik hier als je liever op de website van Viator boekt.TourScanner doet dienst als betalingsfacilitator, maar de geregistreerde handelaar is Viator. De prijs en voorwaarden zijn hetzelfde.
Klik hier als je liever op de website van Viator boekt.Prijs vanaf