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Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger Among the Pilgrims

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David Lindsay, researching old records to learn details of the life of his ancestor, Richard More, soon found himself in the position of the Sorcerer's Apprentice-wherever he looked for one item, ten more appeared. What he found illuminated not only More's own life but painted a clear and satisfying picture of the way the First Comers, Saints and Strangers alike, set off for the new land, suffered the voyage on the Mayflower, and put down their roots to thrive on our continent's northeastern shore. From the story, Richard emerges as a man of questionable morals, much enterprise, and a good deal of old-fashioned pluck, a combination that could get him into trouble-and often did. He lived to father several children, to see, near the end of his life, a friend executed as a witch in Salem, and to be read out of the church for unseemly behavior. Mayflower Bastard lets readers see history in a new light by turning an important episode into a personal experience.

288 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2002

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Dave Lindsay

17 books

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5 stars
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33 (31%)
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33 (31%)
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15 (14%)
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4 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Nancy.
440 reviews8 followers
September 9, 2019
I admit. I only picked it up because of the title. I was intrigued when I saw that it was non-fiction. It was an amazing tale of one poor lad who was shipped off to the New World just to get rid of him and his siblings by their peerage father. Amongst the very youngest that were sent over to the new colony. Sadly Richard More's siblings all died pretty early on. He was a rare thing though. As a child, he was to get land when he came of age. And he did. He also became a sea captain. Richard More was the only Mayflower colonist to have his own headstone when he died. His name pops up in the history of the settling of the New World because he, by virtue of being one of the youngest early settlers, was the longest lived. He had a checkered life that made for even more fun. The writing style is clear and fun. There is a certain wryness on the authors part that makes you realize some of what Richard did were with a wink and a nod. Openly thwarting the tax laws of England. Richard died soon after the Salem Witch trials had ended. His own neighbor was weighted with stones until the man died. If you like biography then this is a good read. If you would like to know some of our earliest history as a colony then this is a must to read.
Profile Image for Barbm1020.
287 reviews16 followers
September 10, 2016
This book is nothing if not thorough, detailing the life and fortunes of Richard More, from cruel English relatives who didn't want to be responsible for him in childhood to his truly self-made status as a First Comer and wild card among the settlers on the Massachusetts coast. His life was colorful and often lawless, but what he did for good or for profit is carefully listed here. My only problem with the book is that the narrative often lapses into speculation and poetic language, which is fine if you're writing songs, but makes the story a little shaky. There are several characters named Richard More, and several characters named Samuel More, and at times I wasn't sure who was who. Still an interesting read.
Profile Image for Betsy.
161 reviews3 followers
February 12, 2012
It could have been written in a better style. Sometimes Lindsay explains the colonial words he uses and sometimes he does not. I had to jump to the footnotes to understand what he was trying to say. I found it confusing.
Coming from Massachusetts, this was an interesting topic for me. It differed from the Massachusetts history we were taught. I enjoyed reading about the origins of the many towns mentioned, but it felt like work.
Profile Image for Kathie.
80 reviews
December 13, 2010
Poorly written on so many levels, and I'm not convinced the research behind it was done well, either. Entertaining, though!
Profile Image for Mike Little.
234 reviews6 followers
July 20, 2025
One of the worst written books I’ve come across. There were many sentences and entire paragraphs that left me scratching my head. Was there an editor? This was a DNF for me. Too bad, as the subject matter was of interest.
615 reviews8 followers
July 5, 2018
This is a very entertaining book, but it's hard to follow in some ways, and that's why I give it a mediocre rating. It's short and snappy, but actually too short and too snappy -- I would have benefited from more background information on a few of the events that transpired during the time period that was covered, as well as of the bizarre social/cultural practices of the era.

The story is thus (in highly simplified form). In the early 1610's, a woman of means in England had an affair with a local yeoman farmer and had four children. Her husband sued her for divorce, and he took the four kids. A couple weeks later, he stuck them on the Mayflower when it it went to America. Three of those children died in that first miserable winter of 1620. One of them, Richard More, survived and lived on as the oldest survivor of the Mayflower. This book tells his story.

Richard was only 6 when he was thrown onto the Mayflower, and he never saw his mother again. He was adopted by a Puritan family that was making the passage and lived as an indentured servant to them for 7 years. Then the record is sketchy, but he probably indentured himself to a shipbuilder or sea captain for another 7 years. Over the next several decades, he traveled back and forth to England, up to Newfoundland, and down to colonies along the U.S. East Coast and the Caribbean. He was a trader, captain, smuggler and pretty damn near a pirate.

Oh, and he married a woman in Massachusetts and another one in England. At the same time.

Telling More's story illuminates a world of the Puritans that is not the one told to us in elementary school. Yes, there were righteous people, and they tried to uphold ideals. But even on that Mayflower voyage there also were regular people who filled out the list of emigrants -- people looking to make a buck or just to escape England. And they didn't get along with each other. Richard More straddled the middle, having grown up in the house of someone with Puritan credentials, but clearly not buying into all of the rigors of it.

The book does a wonderful job of presenting the complications and contradictions of that life. It shows how Puritans tried to present a honest face to the world, as a challenge to what they felt was the hypocrisy of the Christian leaders of England (who were very hypocritical). But the Puritans had to make compromises of their own, such as looking the other way at smuggling that was essential to their existence, as the levies and trade restrictions imposed by England were too steep. And the Puritans also acted cruelly to Indians, in ways that don't need to be repeated here, and which are referenced only in regards to specific incidents in the book in which Richard More might have taken a part.

And finally, near the end of More's life, the Salem witch trials happened, which marked the evil side of religious zeal. More knew several of the people who were hung as witches, in one case owned land that abutted the victim. But More was living under his own cloud of having recently been found out as an adulterer and banished from the church, only to be allowed back in after a change in government.

The author of this book has almost nothing to go on about More, so he speculates over and over. But he tells you what he knows from documents, and then he explains why his guess about what happened is logical, and so it's entertaining in a novelistic way. Yet, it really happened (probably, maybe, sort of). You get inside the head of a man who had to scramble from a young age under the hardest of circumstances -- without parents, siblings, or even his native country, into a land of hardship and unforgiving religious fervor. And yet he persevered and even prospered at times.

173 reviews8 followers
July 27, 2018
The writing style of this book is off-putting, but once you get past the first chapter, it gets better. It is a revealing look at life for the pilgrims and other early residents of North America. As a descendant of Mayflower passengers, I hoped to get a better idea of what their life was like.
This true story follows one of four siblings who were involved in a custody battle and were sent to North American as indentured servants to Pilgrims. Three of the young children did not survive the first brutal winter. Richard More was only about five years old, but he helped bury many of the Mayflower settlers.
From there, he went on to become a fisherman, a boat builder, a sailor, a ship owner and businessman facilitating trade between England and various colonies. The author, David Lindsay, believes Richard had two families, one on each side of the Atlantic, and speculates about how this impacted his life as he strove to keep his secret. His life was not an easy one, but he was the only Mayflower passenger who lived to witness the Salem witch trials.
The author did a remarkable job of researching records in England and the New World. He stitches the facts together with supposition to create a fascinating picture of the hard reality of survival, politics, and the first stirrings of American independence from England.
Profile Image for Debra.
399 reviews
October 14, 2021
This is a well- written account of a man who, as being born out of wedlock, is shipped off to the New World aboard the Mayflower by his mother’s husband (not his father) with his siblings to serve as indentured servants ( Richard at the tender age of five!) before they are to receive land after seven years. Richard is the only survivor of his siblings and has a most colorful life. He lives amongst the Pilgrims and Strangers alike, witnessing the interactions between Pilgrims and Native Americans to the Salem Witch trials. He commits, among many sins, adultery and bigamy, lying, cheating, and what amounts to piracy all while becoming a sea captain, and a tavern keeper.
“ Before me sits a stone from Richard More’s childhood soil at Larden Hall. From time to time I gaze upon it and wonder at the mystery of a seashell imprinted on a stone nicked from a landlocked country. With that image before me, I think back on what I have written, and though the story keeps shifting in my mind’s eye, in the end there is nothing I can do: the pious and the permissive, the minister and the makebate, the scholar and the sailor alike, can only despise me for what I have done. Richard More was neither pilgrim nor beast; he was simply a man who wanted to redeem his mother, to make it “all one before God”, and I have tried- without success—to deny him that privilege. “
Profile Image for Sharon .
217 reviews
January 14, 2023
Interesting tale of of Richard Moore, a Mayflower Passenger (though not one of the 'Pilgrims') sent to Plymouth Colony as a child along with his siblings because they were the products of a years long affair between his mother and a neighbor. Richard, the only one to survive the harshness of the early days of the settlement, grew up to be a merchant sailor. He traveled back and forth to England so many times that he committed bigamy, having a wife in Plymouth and another in England. He was one of the longest lived Mayflower passengers, (the last to die was Mary Cushman in 1699). In his later years, he lived in Salem and was a witness to the famous trials.

The author inserts himself into the writing, but we can overlook it as he is a descendant of Moore's, and he speculates a lot over what this or that person was thinking or what their motivations might have been. It reads almost like a memoir.

Interesting read, if you can get past the 'ruffles and flourishes' of the writing style.
Profile Image for Joshua Horn.
Author 2 books11 followers
Read
March 19, 2025
This book is written in a pretty unique style, which I will not attempt to describe in this short review. I appreciate the effort to be innovative, and to keep the focus on story of the book's subject, as this can be difficult in a situation like this, where the story is interesting, but the records are scanty. On the other hand, I found it quite hard to follow at times, perhaps more careful editing could have improved this. In a major failing, he blurs the line between fact and speculation, asserting as facts things that I know there are not records to definitively prove.
Profile Image for Gregory Knapp.
124 reviews
March 21, 2020
This was a wonderful read. It took a chapter or two to get used to the author's style, but he's done an excellent job of journalistic and genealogical research to pull together the life story of the main character. As a Mayflower descendant myself, it was refreshing to see the historical background before, during and after the Mayflower voyage in the context of the their lives. And as a bonus, I learned something about my own ancestors in the process.
Profile Image for Irene.
260 reviews
May 30, 2021
Focused mostly on his research of a Mayflower relative, it is not the most exciting reading. However, Lindsay did uncover some very interesting information about the first settlements in the New World and gives quite an interesting glimpse into the lives of the first colonists. It is quite amazing that his relative arrived with the Pilgrims and lived through the Salem witch trials.
26 reviews
November 2, 2024
A nicely presented story of an often forgotten character in the early days of Plymouth Colony. The research might seem sketchy, but considering the ages of the records, it is actually very impressive. Richard is one of many who "followed the sea" and this is an interesting portrayal of that element of New England colonial history.
Profile Image for Gail Gauthier.
Author 15 books16 followers
August 19, 2025
This is a fascinating, even heart-breaking, situation. But a lot of detailed speculation holding the story together.
Profile Image for Rebecca Simpson.
12 reviews1 follower
June 29, 2013
What can I say? I love a work of historical research that reads almost like a novel. The details of this man's life are to bizarre not to generate interest. Mother had a number of children, all apparently fathered by men other than her husband. Hubby sent all the kids off with the Pilgrims to settle America as indentured servants. Only one survived. He went on to become a sea captain and apparently had a wife and family in both Massachusetts and in England. I suppose he was pretty secure in the knowledge that one wife would never find out about the other. This man had a life straight out of a soap opera plot, and was involved in much of what was going on during the settlement of Massachusetts. Fascinating stuff and a good recommendation for people who usually find books about history to be a little dry.
Profile Image for Janet Blake.
129 reviews
January 25, 2014
The author clearly enjoyed writing this book! He's inclined to prose. This makes the first chapter a bit of a hard read, but once you're past that, it's a pleasure. He did extensive research on the customs of the time, in order to spot irregularities which might indicate something relevant to the story.

My only complaint is the dropoff at the end. I know that in life there are no neat bows and ribbons, but it sure would have been nice to have a little bit of closure! When was he last heard of?

A great read that will have you pondering peoples' roles in society for a long time.
Profile Image for Susanne Gulde.
311 reviews12 followers
January 16, 2013
Strange writing style, as I think has been mentioned in other reviews.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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