<Ul> <Li> "Master" Leaver: Another passenger not mentioned by Bradford is a person called "Master" Leaver . He was named in Mourt's Relation, London 1622, under a date of January 12, 1621 as a leader of an expedition to rescue Pilgrims lost in the forest for several days while searching for housing - roof thatch . It is unknown in what capacity he came to the Mayflower and his given name is unknown . The title of "Master" indicates that he was a person of some authority and prominence in the company . He may have been a principal officer of the Mayflower . No more is known of him; he may have returned to England on the Mayflower's April 1621 voyage or died of the illnesses that affected so many that first winter . </Li> </Ul> <Li> "Master" Leaver: Another passenger not mentioned by Bradford is a person called "Master" Leaver . He was named in Mourt's Relation, London 1622, under a date of January 12, 1621 as a leader of an expedition to rescue Pilgrims lost in the forest for several days while searching for housing - roof thatch . It is unknown in what capacity he came to the Mayflower and his given name is unknown . The title of "Master" indicates that he was a person of some authority and prominence in the company . He may have been a principal officer of the Mayflower . No more is known of him; he may have returned to England on the Mayflower's April 1621 voyage or died of the illnesses that affected so many that first winter . </Li> <P> Three of Mayflower's owners applied to the Admiralty court for an appraisal of the ship on May 4, 1624, two years after Captain Jones' death in 1622; one of these applicants was Jones' widow Mrs. Josian (Joan) Jones . This appraisal probably was made to determine the valuation of the ship for the purpose of settling the estate of its late master . The appraisal was made by four mariners and shipwrights of Rotherhithe, home and burial place of Captain Jones, where the Mayflower was apparently then lying in the Thames at London . The appraisement is extant and provides information on ship's gear on board at that time, as well as equipment such as muskets and other arms . The ship may have been laid up since Jones' death and allowed to get out of repair, as that is what the appraisal indicates . The vessel was valued at one hundred and twenty - eight pounds, eight shillings, and fourpence . </P> <P> What finally became of the Mayflower is an unsettled issue . Charles Edward Banks, an English historian of the Pilgrim ship, claims that the ship was finally broken up, with her timbers used in the construction of a barn at Jordans village in Buckinghamshire . Tradition claims that this barn still exists as the Mayflower Barn, located within the grounds of Old Jordan in South Buckinghamshire . In 1624, Thomas Russell supposedly added to part of a farmhouse already there with timbers from a ship, believed to be from the Pilgrim ship Mayflower, bought from a shipbreaker's yard in Rotherhithe . The well - preserved structure was a tourist attraction, receiving visitors each year from all over the world and particularly from America, but it is now privately owned and not open to the public . </P>

What was the other ship that left england with the mayflower in 1620