User:Jrcrin001/Carpenter sisters
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The Carpenter sisters of Leiden, Netherlands and Plymouth Colony provided a unique genetic impact and moral influence to the colonization of the Plymouth Colony in America in the early 1620s. Juliana (1584 England – 1665 Plymouth), Agnes (1585 England – 1615/1616 Netherlands), Alice (1590 England – 1670 Plymouth), Mary (1595 – 1687 Plymouth, never married), and Priscilla (1597 Netherlands – 1689 Plymouth) became their family matriarchs that settled the hearths, maintained Pilgrim Fathers family life under difficult religious times and many gave birth to the next generation under harsh physical conditions in the difficult early years.
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Their pioneer immigration to the Americas would be felt in the Plymouth Colony descendants of the George Morton family, the Edward Southworth family, the Plymouth governor George ‘William’ Bradford family of Plymouth Plantation, and the William Wright family. While the impact of the men are more widely known, the Carpenter sisters full impact may never be fully understood or known to history. These Carpenter sisters served quietly, faithfully and with dedication to their religion, families and each other.