Charter of the Colony of New PlymouthThis charter, also known as the Warwick Patent, granted legal rights to the land between Narragansett Bay in present-day Rhode Island and Cohasset, on the Massachusetts coast, to Governor William Bradford and other founders of the Plymouth Colony.
A 1620 patent granted by England's James I had appropriated the entire territory of New England for several noblemen who were incorporated into the Council for New England. The charter below, signed by council member Robert, Earl of Warwick, transfers part of the original land grant to Bradford. William Bradford helped organize the Pilgrims' journey on the Mayflower and drafted the Mayflower Compact after their arrival in 1620. He was elected governor of the colony 30 times. His written accounts of life in the colony, Mourt's Relation (with Edward Winslow) and A History of Plymouth Plantation, offer invaluable insights into the lives of the Pilgrims. In 1640, he relinquished his proprietary control over the colony to the freemen, or voters, of Plymouth.