History
The Arizona
Society of Mayflower Descendants was organized with 37
Charter Members by Georgia Perle Wilson Schmidt (Mrs. Louis Bernard,
Sr.) on June 6, 1955. As of December 31, 2007, the current membership is 369 adult
members and 189 junior members.
What You Need To
Know About Our Society
The Pilgrims
Most people know the story of
the Mayflower which set sail from England in 1620 for the northeast
coast of America. It carried 102 passengers of English origin. Some of
the passengers came from Holland where they had been living
to escape the religious persecution they had experienced in England.
They were now leaving Holland for economic reasons and for the welfare
of their children who would
otherwise lose their identity in this foreign country. They sought a
place where they could continue to have the same religious freedom they
had enjoyed in Holland. The remainder of the passengers, who had still
been living in England, were simply seeking a new home for the
betterment of their personal situations. Together, these two groups
were later to be
known as Pilgrims.
The Mayflower Compact
When the Mayflower was safely
anchored at Cape Cod, the Pilgrims drew up a declaration which
established the basis for an eventual and unprecedented democratic
system of self-government. This document has become known as The
Mayflower Compact.
The Mayflower Descendants
In remembrance of those early
settlers and founders of democracy, descendants formed a Society in
1897 for the purposed of (1) perpetuating the memory of the Pilgrim
Fathers, (2) maintaining the democratic principles of civil and
religious liberty as set forth in the Mayflower Compact, and (3)
fostering the ideals and institutions of American freedom.
The General Society of Mayflower Descendants is a federation of 52
regional societies, consisting of 50 states, the District of Columbia,
and Canada.
Why Should You Be Interested?
- You would be honoring the memory of our forebears who
inspired ideals for the founding of our great Constitutional Republic.
- You would enter into the
fellowship of people who share a common history and ancestry in the
passengers of the Mayflower.
- By joining the Society, your genealogical record
would be filed in a secure place.
- With your record on file
with the Society, it would be easier for your
descendants to establish their genealogical lines.
- Through the programs of the Society, history can be
made to come alive for you.
- This is an era of mobility. If you should move to a
new locality, your membership can be transferred. This would enable you
to meet new people more quickly and easily, and thus become better
acquainted in your new home.
- As a member, you would receive the Arizona Society
newsletter, the Mayflower
Log, three times a
year, providing historical articles as well as society news, and the
General Society Mayflower Quarterly,
a magazine providing current information and views on Pilgrim history.