A silver commemorative Mayflower plate is to be displayed in a new heritage centre after it was donated by an American descendant of the famous voyage.

East Anglian Daily Times: The donated Mayflower plate. Picture: TENDRING DISTRICT COUNCILThe donated Mayflower plate. Picture: TENDRING DISTRICT COUNCIL (Image: Archant)

The Mayflower ship, from Harwich and captained by Harwich resident Christopher Jones, took the first settlers to America in 1620 in a voyage marked annually by Thanksgiving in the United States of America.

A whole programme of events is being planned across 11 UK destinations, including Harwich, for 2020 to mark the 400th anniversary.

In the week after Thanksgiving last year Susan Hopkins, from New York state, got in contact with the Historic Harwich website offering the pristine condition sterling silver commemorative plate, with the Mayflower logo in the centre – one of only a few manufactured in 1978.

It will now be displayed in the new Harwich Heritage Centre.

She is a member of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants as a direct descendant of Stephen Hopkins and William Brewster, two of those who voyaged to America on the Mayflower. She offered the plate to go on permanent display in Harwich.

Her grandfather Wallace Hopkins attended the 350th anniversary festivities in 1970 in Leiden and Plymouth as a member of the Mayflower Society, while her father Richard Gilpin Hopkins, a retired naval officer, had a plaque made for the Mayflower Monument in Southampton in 1977 in honour of Stephen Hopkins and his family.

Ms Hopkins said: “In recognition of the upcoming 400th anniversary of the sailing of the Mayflower and as a direct descendant of Stephen Hopkins and William Brewster, I am honoured to donate the silver General Society of Mayflower Descendants plate to the museum.”

The plate is now being cared for by Tendring District Council (TDC) and will feature in a Welcome Centre it is setting up in Harwich to be home to a whole raft of historical artefacts relating to the town and its links to the Mayflower story.

Carlo Guglielmi, TDC deputy leader, said: “It is fascinating to discover individual stories such as these, and when you realise how some can directly trace their roots back to this iconic voyage you can begin to understand just how important the Mayflower is not just to a nation’s history, but to people alive today.”