Plymouth is known world-wide because of the Pilgrim story and its
considerable significance for the history of the United States. Visitors
have made their own pilgrimages to Plymouth for hundreds of years to see
where it all began, gaze at Plymouth Rock, and visit Pilgrim Hall and
Plimoth Plantation. However, Plymouth isn't just the Pilgrims. It is a
living community where residents still live on the site of the 1620
settlement as well as throughout the entire 103-square-mile township.
The town evolved from a coastal fishing, farming and trading center to
become a factory town attracting immigrants who followed the Pilgrims in
a search for a better life, and has grown three-fold since 1950 to be a
commuting and commercial community that hosts millions of visitors
annually. Regrettably, images do not survive from the town's earliest
history, but even photographs from the past century or so reveal a very
different Plymouth - a Plymouth hard to imagine today. In Plymouth Then
and Now, we focus on what has disappeared to compare that vanished
landscape with the vibrant community of today.