167:
work, they tried to locate Browne and
Goodman in the forest, but they could not be found. These men went to the settlement and informed others that the men could not be located. This caused about 10-12 armed men to search for them, in fear they were captured by Indians. As it happened, Browne and Goodman were eating lunch when their dogs starting chasing a deer and they were soon lost. According to records, "they wandered all that afternoon being wet, and at night it did freeze and snow, they were slenderly appareled and had no weapons but each one sickle." At night they thought they heard "lions" in the forest and climbed a tree for shelter. They stayed by the tree that night in case they had to escape to safety. The next day they finally climbed the highest hill they could find, were able to see their harbor and find their way back to the settlement. After the searchers had given up hope of finding them, Browne and Goodman finally arrived in Plymouth quite cold, frostbitten, tired and hungry, having survived their first experience alone in the New England forest.
146:, England on 6/16 September 1620. The small, 100-foot ship had 102 passengers and a crew of about 30–40 in extremely cramped conditions. By the second month out, the ship was being buffeted by strong westerly gales, causing the ship's timbers to be badly shaken with caulking failing to keep out sea water, and with passengers, even in their berths, lying wet and ill. This, combined with a lack of proper rations and unsanitary conditions for several months, attributed to what would be fatal for many, especially the majority of women and children. On the way there were two deaths, a crew member and a passenger, but the worst was yet to come after arriving at their destination when, in the space of several months, almost half the passengers perished in cold, harsh, unfamiliar New England winter.
265:
30:
117:
154:, strong winter seas forced them to return to the harbor at the Cape Cod hook, where they anchored on 11/11 November . Realizing they were not at the intended destination they determined to bind themselves as a democratically governed and administered colony loyal to England. This document became known as the Mayflower Compact and was signed by all eligible men on behalf of themselves, their families, their fortunes and property. Peter Browne was one of the men who signed the Mayflower Compact."
304:
to assume custody of Browne's daughter Mary and the same amount to
William Gilson for the custody of Browne's daughter Priscilla with the court placing Mary with Doane for nine years and Priscilla with Gilson for twelve years until both were age seventeen. Mary retained custody of her two children by
251:
In addition, Peter was step-father of the children of Martha Ford: John Ford, born about 1617, whose name appears in a record of 5 January 1640/1 and after that no further reference can be found; Martha Ford, born about 1619, married
William Nelson in Plymouth on 29 October 1640 and had four children
190:
In 1626 Peter Browne was one of twenty-seven
Purchasers involved with the colony joint-stock company which afterwards was turned over to the control of senior colony members. That group was called Undertakers, and were made up of such as Bradford, Standish and Allerton initially who were later joined
170:
In the
Plymouth settlement of 1620, the house of Peter Browne was near that of John Goodman and was close to the harbor on the south side of the village street. John Goodman is listed as having been alive at least on 19 January 1621 and is noted as having not survived that first winter, but his name
194:
By the time of the 1627 Division of the Cattle, Peter Browne and his wife Martha had a daughter Mary and was pregnant with another daughter, Priscilla. Also in the family were children from Martha (Ford) Browne's first marriage, John and Martha Ford. The two Ford children shared in the 1627 division
88:
Peter Browne was a son of
William Browne of Dorking. He had two older siblings, Jane and Thomas, as well as three younger brothers, Samuel, John and James. In or about 1605, when Peter was about ten years of age, his father died and the children may have been sent to family members and friends under
235:
Priscilla Browne was born about 1628 and died after 17 February 1697/8. She married
William Allen in Sandwich on 21 March 1649. Priscilla and William did not have children. On 8 June 1650 William Allen of Sandwich and wife Priscilla sold to John Brown of Duxbury, weaver, land in Duxbury which was
198:
His wife Martha died about 1630, and Peter Browne remarried to a woman named Mary whose surname and ancestry have not been discovered. With the second wife, Peter Browne had two more children, Rebecca, about 1631, and another child about 1633, name and gender unknown, who may have died as a youth.
183:
as the only recorded woman on board. Her husband Mr. Ford apparently died on the voyage or just after arrival. Martha gave birth to a son the day of arrival but he died soon after. Per Banks, Mourt's
Relations (p. 63) records this event: "the good wife Ford was delivered of a sonne the first
231:
Mary Browne was born about 1626 and died after
November 1689. She married Ephraim Tinkham in Plymouth by 27 October 1647 and had nine children. A deed dated 27 October 1647 notes that Ephraim Tinkham and wife Mary sold to Henry Sampson land in Duxbury which was one-third of the land belonging to
166:
and others had entered the forest some distance from the
Pilgrim plantation in order to find material for roofing thatch. Sometime around noon, Browne and Goodman wandered further into the forest while the other men stayed behind to make up the thatch into bundles. After these men had done that
100:
voyage. Peter's sister Jane had married John Hammon in Dorking in 1610 and her mother-in-law, Jane Hammon, had appointed William Mullins as her estate administrator. Also, John Hammon's sister Susan married Ephraim Bothell, who purchased William Mullins's property and home before Mullins and his
202:
On 1 January 1633, Browne was fined three shillings by Plymouth Colony Court for failing to appear at the court session and on 2 January was fined by the court in the same amount for the same reason. When he did appear in court on 7 January, he was sued by fellow
289:, twelve shillings for building his coffin. Browne's estate inventory detailed such as grain, animals, a firearm, tools, household goods, clothing, etc.. Ironically, his attending doctor Samuel Fuller also died from the same disease at that time, as did fellow
312:
Peter Browne died shortly before 10 October 1633, when the after-death inventory of his property was taken. His death was not recorded in the records of Plymouth County. He and his first wife Martha were both buried at Burial Hill in Plymouth.
276:
Peter Brown had health issues which became serious in late 1632. He died later in 1633, possibly in early fall from a probable infectious disease. The inventory of his assets was taken on 10 October 1633. He had apparently been attended to by
223:
with the husband dying before arrival. She was married to Peter Browne in 1626 and had two daughters before her death in 1630. His second wife was Mary (maiden name and parentage unknown), married about 1630 or 1631 and had two children.
236:
one part of three belonging to the children of Peter Brown, brother of John Brown. On 15 April 1668 William Allen sold to Henry Tucker a one-third share of land in Dartmouth which was granted to Peter Brown as a Purchaser of 1626.
308:
At age seventeen, Mary and Priscilla Browne asked the Plymouth Court to assign their custody over to their uncle, John Browne, a weaver then residing in Duxbury. Browne was a brother of their father Peter Browne.
149:
On 9/19 November 1620, after about 3 months at sea, including a month of delays in England, they spotted land, which was Cape Cod. And after several days of trying to get south to their planned destination of the
605:
610:
563:
174:
In the 1623 Division of Land, as a single man, Peter Browne received one "aker" of land "these lye on the South side of the brooke to the baywards." In that record, his name appears as "Peter Browen."
195:
of the cattle. The "eaight lot" of the Division under 'Samuell ffuller", consisted of the "Peeter Browne" family listed as "Peeter Browne, Martha Browne, Mary Browne, John fford, Martha fford."
131:
The relationship between Peter Browne and the Mullins family in Dorking did seem quite close. As a single man of about age twenty-five, and possibly coming from an apprenticeship, he boarded the
281:
and his inventory shows a debt by Browne's widow of Dr. Samuel Fuller for one peck of malt and some purgative, and a debt for "letting her man bleed." His estate also owed Kenelm, brother of
96:
voyage from his relationship with the Mullins family. William Mullins was a shoe and boot maker in Dorking and was one of the Londoners who was later involved in the financial support of the
211:
for "divers accounts…wherein they differ." They were sent to arbitration, the outcome of which is not known. Also in 1633, he appeared on the Tax List for that year as "Peter Browne."
556:
187:
Widow Martha Ford received four lots (shares) in the 1623 Division of Land, to which she was entitled by this family count. In those records, she is listed as "Widow Foord."
191:
by Winslow, Brewster, Howland, Alden, Prence and others from London, former Merchant Adventurers. On the agreement, dated 26 October 1626, his name appears as Peter Browne.
135:
in the company of the Mullins family. But these ties were to be broken with the death of William Mullins, his wife Alice and son Joseph soon after arrival in the New World.
549:
470:
The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers: who came to Plymouth on the "Mayflower" in 1620, the "Fortune" in 1621, and "The Little James" in 1623,
1133:
997:
534:
The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers: who came to Plymouth on the "Mayflower" in 1620, the "Fortune" in 1621, and "The Little James" in 1623
454:
The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers: who came to Plymouth on the "Mayflower" in 1620, the "Fortune" in 1621, and "The Little James" in 1623
1055:
877:
300:
Following Browne's death, his widow Mary was made administrator of his estate on 11 November 1633. She was ordered by the court to pay 15 pounds to
721:
706:
1084:
902:
617:
405:, (Boston: Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1920), Photocopies of the 1622, 1646 and 1669 versions of the document, pp. 7-19.
82:
1060:
857:
816:
781:
761:
294:
897:
892:
887:
882:
791:
622:
1041:
978:
811:
801:
264:
1076:
1070:
434:
Mary Boast, The Mayflower and Pilgrim story: chapters from Rotherhithe and Southwark, London Borough of Southwark - 1970, page 34
1138:
971:
443:
Leon C. Hills, Leon Clark Hills, History and Genealogy of the Mayflower Planters, Genealogical Publishing Com - 2009, page 79
179:
1123:
985:
637:
29:
1128:
1050:
596:
177:
Sometime after the Division of Land, Peter Browne married the widow Martha Ford, arriving in November 1621 on the ship
696:
872:
644:
305:
her first husband and was allowed the rest of Browne's estate for her own third for raising her own two children.
354:
766:
208:
124:
116:
1036:
1017:
655:
163:
244:
Rebecca Browne was born about 1631 and died after 9 March 1698/9. She married William Snow by about 1654.
964:
252:
before dying in Plymouth on 20 December 1683; and a son born on 9 November 1621 upon the arrival of the
219:
Peter Browne married twice, first to Martha, the widow of Mr. Ford, both passengers in 1621 on the ship
353:(a collaboration of Plymouth Plantation and New England Historic Genealogical Society accessed 2016),
1118:
1113:
1091:
1024:
662:
89:
apprenticeships. A local weaver probably apprenticed the three youngest sons in that line of work.
673:
162:
On 12 January 1621, while the Pilgrims were building their settlement of Plymouth, Peter Browne,
151:
17:
1009:
862:
632:
523:
Cover Caleb H. Johnson, The Mayflower and Her Passengers, Xlibris Corporation - 2005, page 104
171:
does appear in records of the 1623 Division of Land and he may have died sometime after that.
58:
1065:
867:
852:
826:
741:
681:
649:
541:
37:
912:
907:
831:
821:
756:
746:
716:
686:
627:
286:
1107:
1004:
806:
796:
776:
736:
726:
701:
691:
278:
269:
512:
1030:
786:
771:
731:
751:
51:
1594 – 1633), was a passenger on the historic 1620 voyage of the
847:
301:
948:
943:
938:
590:
572:
355:
https://www.plimoth.org/sites/default/files/wysiwyg-images/brown_peter_2.pdf
53:
143:
933:
928:
328:
In records of the time, his name was either Peter Browne or Peter Brown
70:
74:
263:
115:
545:
456:, (Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc. 2006), pp. 104, 117
184:
night shee landed, and both of them are very well."
957:
921:
840:
672:
582:
490:
488:
486:
484:
482:
480:
478:
417:
415:
413:
411:
364:
362:
77:, England. This was the same home town as other
472:(Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc. 2006), p. 117
464:
462:
508:
506:
504:
384:
382:
380:
378:
557:
346:
344:
342:
340:
338:
336:
334:
240:Children of Peter and Mary (unknown) Browne:
8:
536:, (Genealogical Publishing Inc. 2006), p. 41
69:Browne was baptised on 26 January 1594/5 in
564:
550:
542:
28:
351:A genealogical profile of Peter Browne,
321:
247:A child born by 1633, who died by 1647.
606:who died at sea November/December 1620
425:(Indiana: Xlibris Corp., 2006), p. 103
392:(Indiana: Xlibris Corp., 2006), p. 102
260:Peter Browne, death, estate and burial
256:in Plymouth, but who died soon after.
92:Browne may have heard of the proposed
498:(Indiana: Xlibris Corp. 2006), p. 104
403:The Mayflower Compact and its signers
372:(Indiana:Xlibris Corp., 2006), p. 107
227:Children of Peter and Martha Browne:
7:
1061:National Monument to the Forefathers
1134:People from Plymouth, Massachusetts
1085:Mayflower: The Pilgrims' Adventure
121:Signing the Mayflower Compact 1620
25:
611:who died in the winter of 1620–21
496:The Mayflower and Her Passengers,
370:The Mayflower and Her Passengers,
1077:Signing of the Mayflower Compact
1071:Pilgrim Tercentenary half dollar
423:The Mayflower and Her Passengers
390:The Mayflower and Her Passengers
18:Peter Browne (Mayflower Pilgrim)
1:
577:passengers and related topics
48:
1051:Myles Standish Burial Ground
268:Peter Browne's home site on
34:Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor
57:and was a signatory of the
1155:
922:Native American associates
272:in Plymouth, Massachusetts
682:Priscilla (Mullins) Alden
618:Captain Christopher Jones
1056:Myles Standish Monument
125:Jean Leon Gerome Ferris
1139:Burials at Burial Hill
1037:Mayflower AI sea drone
1018:Mayflower House Museum
656:Of Plymouth Plantation
532:Charles Edward Banks,
468:Charles Edward Banks,
452:Charles Edward Banks,
401:George Ernest Bowman,
273:
232:Peter Brown, deceased.
215:Marriages and Children
128:
41:
267:
119:
32:
1124:Mayflower passengers
1092:The Pilgrim Progress
1129:People from Dorking
1025:Pilgrim Hall Museum
513:Pilgrim Hall Museum
101:family boarded the
878:Christopher Martin
494:Caleb H. Johnson,
421:Caleb H. Johnson,
388:Caleb H. Johnson,
368:Caleb H. Johnson,
274:
158:In Plymouth Colony
152:Colony of Virginia
129:
42:
1101:
1100:
863:Constance Hopkins
633:Mayflower Compact
279:Dr. Samuel Fuller
209:Dr. Samuel Fuller
81:passengers – the
59:Mayflower Compact
16:(Redirected from
1146:
1066:Pilgrim Monument
841:Other passengers
707:William Brewster
697:William Bradford
663:Mourt's Relation
566:
559:
552:
543:
537:
530:
524:
521:
515:
510:
499:
492:
473:
466:
457:
450:
444:
441:
435:
432:
426:
419:
406:
399:
393:
386:
373:
366:
357:
348:
329:
326:
123:, a painting by
50:
21:
1154:
1153:
1149:
1148:
1147:
1145:
1144:
1143:
1104:
1103:
1102:
1097:
1046:Heritage Centre
953:
917:
903:William Mullins
873:Stephen Hopkins
868:Oceanus Hopkins
853:John Billington
836:
827:Peregrine White
742:Humility Cooper
668:
650:Plymouth Colony
623:The More family
578:
570:
540:
531:
527:
522:
518:
511:
502:
493:
476:
467:
460:
451:
447:
442:
438:
433:
429:
420:
409:
400:
396:
387:
376:
367:
360:
349:
332:
327:
323:
319:
262:
217:
160:
114:
67:
65:Life in England
38:William Halsall
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
1152:
1150:
1142:
1141:
1136:
1131:
1126:
1121:
1116:
1106:
1105:
1099:
1098:
1096:
1095:
1089:
1081:
1073:
1068:
1063:
1058:
1053:
1048:
1039:
1034:
1027:
1022:
1021:
1020:
1007:
1002:
1001:
1000:
983:
982:
981:
969:
961:
959:
955:
954:
952:
951:
946:
941:
936:
931:
925:
923:
919:
918:
916:
915:
913:Richard Warren
910:
908:Myles Standish
905:
900:
895:
890:
885:
880:
875:
870:
865:
860:
855:
850:
844:
842:
838:
837:
835:
834:
832:Edward Winslow
829:
824:
822:Resolved White
819:
814:
809:
804:
799:
794:
789:
784:
779:
774:
769:
764:
759:
757:Moses Fletcher
754:
749:
747:John Crackston
744:
739:
734:
729:
724:
719:
717:William Butten
714:
709:
704:
699:
694:
689:
687:Isaac Allerton
684:
678:
676:
670:
669:
667:
666:
659:
652:
647:
642:
641:
640:
630:
625:
620:
615:
614:
613:
608:
594:
586:
584:
580:
579:
571:
569:
568:
561:
554:
546:
539:
538:
525:
516:
500:
474:
458:
445:
436:
427:
407:
394:
374:
358:
330:
320:
318:
315:
287:Edward Winslow
261:
258:
249:
248:
245:
238:
237:
233:
216:
213:
159:
156:
113:
107:
66:
63:
24:
14:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
1151:
1140:
1137:
1135:
1132:
1130:
1127:
1125:
1122:
1120:
1117:
1115:
1112:
1111:
1109:
1094:(reenactment)
1093:
1090:
1087:
1086:
1082:
1080:(1922 relief)
1079:
1078:
1074:
1072:
1069:
1067:
1064:
1062:
1059:
1057:
1054:
1052:
1049:
1047:
1045:
1040:
1038:
1035:
1033:
1032:
1028:
1026:
1023:
1019:
1016:
1015:
1014:
1012:
1008:
1006:
1005:Plymouth Rock
1003:
999:
996:
995:
994:
993:
989:
984:
980:
977:
976:
975:
974:
970:
968:
967:
963:
962:
960:
956:
950:
947:
945:
942:
940:
937:
935:
932:
930:
927:
926:
924:
920:
914:
911:
909:
906:
904:
901:
899:
896:
894:
891:
889:
886:
884:
881:
879:
876:
874:
871:
869:
866:
864:
861:
859:
858:Francis Eaton
856:
854:
851:
849:
846:
845:
843:
839:
833:
830:
828:
825:
823:
820:
818:
817:William White
815:
813:
810:
808:
807:Thomas Tinker
805:
803:
800:
798:
797:Edward Tilley
795:
793:
790:
788:
785:
783:
782:Thomas Rogers
780:
778:
777:Degory Priest
775:
773:
770:
768:
767:Samuel Fuller
765:
763:
762:Edward Fuller
760:
758:
755:
753:
750:
748:
745:
743:
740:
738:
737:Francis Cooke
735:
733:
730:
728:
727:James Chilton
725:
723:
720:
718:
715:
713:
710:
708:
705:
703:
702:Love Brewster
700:
698:
695:
693:
692:Mary Allerton
690:
688:
685:
683:
680:
679:
677:
675:
671:
665:
664:
660:
658:
657:
653:
651:
648:
646:
643:
639:
636:
635:
634:
631:
629:
626:
624:
621:
619:
616:
612:
609:
607:
604:
603:
602:
600:
595:
593:
592:
588:
587:
585:
581:
576:
575:
567:
562:
560:
555:
553:
548:
547:
544:
535:
529:
526:
520:
517:
514:
509:
507:
505:
501:
497:
491:
489:
487:
485:
483:
481:
479:
475:
471:
465:
463:
459:
455:
449:
446:
440:
437:
431:
428:
424:
418:
416:
414:
412:
408:
404:
398:
395:
391:
385:
383:
381:
379:
375:
371:
365:
363:
359:
356:
352:
347:
345:
343:
341:
339:
337:
335:
331:
325:
322:
316:
314:
310:
306:
303:
298:
296:
295:Francis Eaton
292:
288:
284:
280:
271:
270:Leyden Street
266:
259:
257:
255:
246:
243:
242:
241:
234:
230:
229:
228:
225:
222:
214:
212:
210:
206:
200:
196:
192:
188:
185:
182:
181:
175:
172:
168:
165:
157:
155:
153:
147:
145:
141:
136:
134:
126:
122:
118:
112:
108:
106:
104:
99:
95:
90:
86:
84:
80:
76:
72:
64:
62:
60:
56:
55:
46:
39:
35:
31:
27:
19:
1083:
1075:
1043:
1031:Mayflower II
1029:
1010:
992:Little James
991:
987:
972:
965:
898:Richard More
792:George Soule
787:Henry Samson
772:John Howland
732:Mary Chilton
712:Peter Browne
711:
661:
654:
598:
589:
573:
533:
528:
519:
495:
469:
453:
448:
439:
430:
422:
402:
397:
389:
369:
350:
324:
311:
307:
299:
297:and others.
290:
282:
275:
253:
250:
239:
226:
220:
218:
204:
201:
197:
193:
189:
186:
178:
176:
173:
169:
164:John Goodman
161:
148:
139:
137:
132:
130:
120:
110:
102:
97:
93:
91:
87:
78:
68:
52:
45:Peter Browne
44:
43:
33:
26:
1119:1633 deaths
1114:1594 births
1088:(1979 film)
888:Jasper More
883:Elinor More
812:John Turner
802:John Tilley
752:Edward Doty
722:John Carver
674:Separatists
638:signatories
628:Cole's Hill
1108:Categories
998:passengers
979:passengers
848:John Alden
601:passengers
317:References
302:John Doane
293:passenger
285:passenger
207:passenger
1044:Mayflower
1011:Mayflower
966:Speedwell
949:Corbitant
944:Massasoit
939:Hobbamock
893:Mary More
599:Mayflower
591:Mayflower
574:Mayflower
291:Mayflower
283:Mayflower
205:Mayflower
142:departed
140:Mayflower
133:Mayflower
111:Mayflower
103:Mayflower
98:Mayflower
94:Mayflower
79:Mayflower
54:Mayflower
1042:Harwich
645:Pilgrims
597:List of
144:Plymouth
85:family.
1013:Society
973:Fortune
958:Related
934:Samoset
929:Squanto
583:General
254:Fortune
221:Fortune
180:Fortune
109:On the
83:Mullins
71:Dorking
75:Surrey
40:(1882)
990:and
988:Anne
986:The
138:The
127:1899
36:by
1110::
503:^
477:^
461:^
410:^
377:^
361:^
333:^
105:.
73:,
61:.
49:c.
565:e
558:t
551:v
47:(
20:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.