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Plymouth and Voyager
The Toyota Van and Dodge Caravan / Plymouth Voyager featured very different structural designs: the Dodge Caravan / Plymouth Voyager had a FF layout and unibody construction, while the Toyota Van Wagon featured a FMR layout and was built on a body-on-frame chassis.
Chrysler had also been developing a minivan based on the Chrysler K platform, releasing the boxy Dodge Caravan / Plymouth Voyager earlier than the Espace, in 1983.
File: 91PlymouthGrandVoyagerLE. jpg | Plymouth Grand Voyager 1991, Generation II
* Plymouth Voyager
One person was killed when the 14: 25 Plymouth to Edinburgh Virgin Cross Country service collided with a car that had veered off Moor Lane and onto the tracks, causing the front carriage of the Voyager train set to derail and the car driver to die.
* 1983-Chrysler unveils its minivans-the Dodge Caravan and Plymouth Voyager ( as 1984 models )-to the public
Also from Ford, Iacocca brought to Chrysler the " Mini-Max " project, which, in 1983, bore fruit in the highly successful Dodge Caravan and Plymouth Voyager.
By the late 1990s, only four vehicles were sold under the Plymouth name: the Voyager / Grand Voyager minivans, the Breeze mid-size sedan, the Neon compact car, and the Prowler sports car, which was to be the last model unique to Plymouth, though the Chrysler PT Cruiser was conceived as a concept unique to Plymouth before production commenced as a Chrysler model.
1998 Plymouth Voyager
* 1996: In an attempt to move Plymouth downmarket, Chrysler makes the redesigned Voyager only available in base and mid-level SE models.
This is also the last year for the Voyager minivan as a Plymouth.
* Plymouth Grand Voyager ( 1987 – 2000 )
* Plymouth Voyager ( 1974 – 2000 )
File: Plymouth Voyager Expresso 1998. png | 1998 Voyager Expresso
* Plymouth Voyager ( van )-1974-1983-full-size van, same as Dodge Sportsman
The Caravan was introduced for the 1984 model year along with its nameplate variant, the Plymouth Voyager ( 1984-2001 ).

Plymouth and is
Plymouth Rock is the traditional site of disembarkation of William Bradford and the Mayflower Pilgrims who founded Plymouth Colony in 1620 and an important symbol in American history.
In the United States, the earliest known cross-stitch sampler is currently housed at Pilgrim Hall in Plymouth, Massachusetts .< ref >
In Plymouth, Massachusetts, there is a 1633 account of the husband of Mary Ring auctioning her cranberry-dyed petticoat for 16 shillings.
Another version of the story is that he canvassed with Nancy, Lady Astor, MP for Plymouth Sutton, and received an embarrassingly friendly welcome at boarding houses who were used to renting rooms by the hour to sailors and their lady companions.
* 1620 – Plymouth Colony: William Bradford and the Mayflower Pilgrims land on what is now known as Plymouth Rock in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Among Open assemblies, also termed Plymouth Brethren, the Eucharist is more commonly called the Breaking of Bread or the Lord's Supper.
* 1621 – Myles Standish is appointed as first commander of Plymouth colony.
The Hamoaze (; ) is an estuarine stretch of the tidal River Tamar, between the River Lynher and Plymouth Sound, England.
On his father's side, Hefner claims he is a direct descendant of Plymouth governor William Bradford.
John Alden ( 1599 – September 12, 1687 ) is said to be the first person from the Mayflower to set foot on Plymouth Rock in 1620.
Millbridge is a small neighbourhood of Plymouth, on the boundary of what used to be the towns of Plymouth and Devonport, in the English county of Devon.
A summer bus service, the Transmoor link from Plymouth to Exeter and vice versa, passes through the town and there is a daytime service linking Princetown to Yelverton and Tavistock, but in general public transport is poor and any visitors hoping to visit Plymouth or the nearby town of Tavistock via bus in the evening will be disappointed.
Mutley Plain is a street in Plymouth, Devon, England.
Plymouth Hoe, referred to locally as the Hoe, is a large south facing open public space in the English coastal city of Plymouth.
The Hoe is adjacent to and above the low limestone cliffs that form the seafront and it commands views of Plymouth Sound, Drake's Island, and across the Hamoaze to Mount Edgcumbe in Cornwall.
Plymouth Hoe is perhaps best known for the probably apocryphal story that Sir Francis Drake played his famous game of bowls here in 1588 while waiting for the tide to change before sailing out with the English fleet to engage with the Spanish Armada.
The Hoe also includes a long broad tarmacked promenade ( currently a disabled motorists car park ) which serves as a spectacular military parade ground and which is often used for displays by Plymouth based Royal Navy, Royal Marines, the Army garrison, as well as for funfairs and open-air concerts.

Plymouth and nameplate
The " Chrysler " portion of the nameplate was dropped with the introduction of the Plymouth Model U in 1929.
The nameplate was similar to the " Valiant " name of the first Plymouth compact car that preceded the Volare, except for the first two letters.
In 1962, Chrysler Fevre Argentina started building the 1960 version of the U. S. Plymouth Valiant under the Chrysler nameplate ( although later most of the cars were sold under the Valiant nameplate as an independent brand ).
Vehicles bearing the Chrysler Voyager nameplate were briefly sold in the United States from 2001 to 2003 as a rebadged version of the short-wheelbase ( SWB ) variant of the Plymouth Voyager following the 2001 folding of the Plymouth division of DaimlerChrysler AG.
Chrysler's short-wheelbase minivan was instead sold under the Voyager nameplate, which had been transferred to the Chrysler brand in mid-2000 from the Plymouth brand.
Originally conceived as a Plymouth model, the PT Cruiser received the Chrysler nameplate on introduction in anticipation of the 2001 discontinuation of the Plymouth brand.
Plymouth discontinued the Savoy nameplate at the end of the 1964 model year, except in Canada, where it continued through 1965.

Plymouth and applied
Pilgrims ( US ), or Pilgrim Fathers ( UK ), is a name commonly applied to early settlers of the Plymouth Colony in present-day Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States.
The term " Pilgrims " is now used primarily to refer to the Separatist congregation, although it is often applied to all the original settlers of Plymouth Colony ( both Separatist and Anglican ).
After failing to secure government funding for a new road bridge, Plymouth City Council and Cornwall County Council applied for permission to operate a toll bridge for which they received Royal Assent in 1957.
The Pilgrim Fathers, a name commonly applied to early settlers of the Plymouth Colony in present-day Massachusetts originated from villages of Babworth and Scrooby on the outskirts of East Retford between 1586 and 1605.
From late-1978 for model year 1979, the Dodge Colt and Plymouth Champ nameplates were applied to the front-wheel-drive Mitsubishi Mirage imports into North America.
Pirate FM was one of the two stations that applied for the licence to serve Plymouth after the licence was handed back by Macquarie's Diamond FM.
The term was most correctly applied to cars close to the width limit carrying nameplates of " The Low Priced Three ", Chevrolet, Ford, and Plymouth.
Consequently, in the same year, 1921, when the Royal Marines announced a vacancy for bandmastership of the Band of the Plymouth Division, Ricketts applied, turning down the Kneller Hall application.

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