• Spooner House

    27 North Street

    Built in 1748, the two-story house, complete with its original furnishings, showcases 200 years of domestic life in Plymouth. This humble home on one of Plymouth’s most picturesque streets provides a valuable glimpse into life in historic Plymouth.

    https://plymouthantiquarian.org/historic-sites/spooner-house/

  • Pilgrim Hall Museum

    75 Court Street

    Encounter authentic histories of early Plymouth at Pilgrim Hall Museum, one of the nation’s oldest museums and a centerpiece of historic downtown Plymouth since 1824. The Museum’s extraordinary collection of 17th century artifacts, some of which actually came on the Mayflower, illuminates the complex story of English colonists and Indigenous peoples during a remarkable episode of America’s beginnings.

    pilgrimhall.org

  • Mayflower Society House

    18 Winslow Street

    The General Society of Mayflower Descendants, also known as the Mayflower Society, is an organization whose membership can prove that they descend from at least one of the passengers onboard the Mayflower’s 1620 voyage. The campus consists of a magnificent 18th century mansion originally owned by the great-grandson of Mayflower passenger Edward Winslow, spectacular gardens, a research library, and a magnificent view of Plymouth Harbor.

    https://themayflowersociety.org/

  • See Plymouth

    4 North Street

    See Plymouth knows all there is to know about Plymouth. For First Fridays, it hosts Just 2 Guys on First Fridays Plymouth. These musicians are well-known around town for making you want to get up and dance. Check them out, in front of the See Plymouth headquarters at 4 North Street.

    www.seeplymouth.com

  • Jabez Howland House

    33 Sandwich Street

    The Jabez Howland House is the only existing house in Plymouth where Pilgrims actually lived. Jabez Howland, son of Mayflower passenger’s John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley, lived here with his family until 1680. It was a private residence until 1912 when it was purchased for a museum by the Pilgrim John Howland Society. The house is on the National Register of Historic Places.

    pilgrimjohnhowlandsociety.org