Page Brewster Garden [33] Brewster Spring [34] Burial Hill [16] Old Fort [18] Grave of William Bradford [21] Site of Watch Tower [17] Old Graves [19] Cole’s Hill [40] Court House [6] Edward Winslow House [44] Harlow House [61] Howland House [59] Industries [6] Kendall Holmes House [62] Leyden Street [32] Massasoit Statue [43] Mayflower Passengers [65] Major John Bradford House [7] Memorial Fountain [40] Memorial Seat [42] Morton Park [57] National Monument to Forefathers [9] Old Colony Club [5] Pilgrim Hall [49] Pilgrim Maiden [34] Pilgrim Society [55] Plimoth Plantation [13] Plymouth Rock [37] Plymouth Memorial Building [6] Postoffice [6] Registry of Deeds [47] Sarcophagus [41] Sandwich Street [60] Sparrow House [57] Standish Guards [6] Summer Street [57] Tabitha Plasket House [48] Training Green [60] The Compact [70] Town Square and Churches [29] Town Brook [32] Watson’s Hill [56]

CARVER AND NORTH STREETS, LOOKING TOWARD SHIRLEY SQUARE—North Street was laid out before 1633, and has been variously called, in old deeds, New Street, Queen Street, North Street, and Howland Street. Carver Street, once part of North, runs around Cole’s Hill, and connects with Leyden, oldest Plymouth street.

PLYMOUTH—THE TOWN

The Town of Plymouth, made famous as the permanent settlement of the Pilgrims, is the county seat of Plymouth County in southeastern Massachusetts. It is 37 miles southeast of Boston and is reached by rail, and by Routes north via the Old Colony Division of the N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R., and by automobile over routes No. 3 and No. 3A. It overlooks Cape Cod Bay and a well protected harbor. Its year ’round population is approximately 14,000. It has an area of 108 square miles, the largest in the State.

In addition to its historical association and its old records, among which one may browse at pleasure, the town has a fine public school system, public library, many churches, an excellent water system, several banks and theatres, an adequate fire and police department, a modernized hospital and high quality of public service. There are fine bathing beaches and recreational centers, hotels and accommodation for tourists.

Fraternal organizations are numerous. The Old Colony Club, organized 1769, the oldest social organization in America, is located on Court Street, opposite the Court House. Other active societies are the Plymouth Woman’s Club, the Plymouth Antiquarian Society, the Cordage Men’s Club, the Plymouth Country Club, the Girls’ Club, the Boys’ Club, the New Century Club, and the Manomet Village Club.

The Plymouth County Court House occupies a commanding position facing Court Street with the Registry of Deeds near at hand on North Russell Street and easily accessible to visitors. A new Federal Post Office Building stands at the historic corner of Leyden and Main Streets. A commodious armory on Court Street accommodates the National Guard. At one time this building was the headquarters of the Standish Guards, the local militia company organized and chartered in 1818.

Opposite the armory is Plymouth’s Memorial Building, dedicated in 1926 to the men of Plymouth who served in all the wars in which the country has been engaged. It has a large hall with a seating capacity of 2000 and was built at a cost of $300,000. This building is a few steps north of Pilgrim Hall, that sacred depository of Pilgrimiana, a mecca for modern day Pilgrims, visited every year by thousands from the world over.