1 Some of these recommendations appear in Young, Chronicles of the First Planters, 165ff., and in the Winthrop Papers.

2 The first and in many ways the most detailed analysis was Tyack, “Migration from East Anglia.” Tyack has also published “The Humble Puritans of East Anglia and the New England Movement: Evidence from the Court Records of the 1630’s,” NEHGR 138 (1984), 79-106. Other studies include T. H. Breen and Stephen Foster, “Moving to the New World: The Character of Early Massachusetts Immigration,” WMQ3 30 (1973), 189-222; and Virginia DeJohn Anderson, “Migrants and Motives: Religion and the Settlement of New England, 1630-1640,” NEQ58 (1985), 339-83.

3 Breen and Foster, “Moving to the New World,” 189-222. Anderson, “Migrants and Motives,” 339-83. Of major ethnic stocks, in American history, only the Germans approached this proportion of migration in family groups.