Prayer, Persecution, And Portsmouth

Prayer, Persecution, and Portsmouth: A Story of Colonist Anne Hutchinson

Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643) is a key figure in the history of American religious

freedom. As a pioneer settler of Massachusetts Bay Colony, Hutchinson held Bible

studies that won her great admiration with a wide following. However, Hutchinson’s

religious leadership eventually offended colony officials, leading to her banishment.

Hutchinson later co-founded Rhode Island with religious freedom in mind.

Hutchinson, born Anne Marbury, was raised in Lincolnshire, England. There Anne’s

father was an outspoken Protestant clergyman. When he was sentenced to house arrest for

challenging the Church, the Reverend turned his energies to educating his daughter. With

the influence of her father’s tutelage and strong character, Anne became a bright and

confident religious scholar.

Members of Anne’s community continued to have trouble with the church of Elizabethan

England. She and other Protestants became involved with a new reformist movement

known as Puritanism, which aimed to “purify” the Church of all Roman Catholic

influences. Ultimately believing that the Church was beyond reform, Anne, her husband

William, and their fifteen children followed Puritan Reverend John Cotton to Boston in

1634. There, all believed, they would practice their faith openly without persecution.

Three years after arriving in Boston, Hutchinson became the first female defendant in a

Massachusetts colonial court. What had gone wrong? Anne’s early months in Boston had

been pleasant enough. Bostonians welcomed her midwifery skills, and when she began

holding women’s prayer meetings at home, she became even more respected as a model

of Puritan womanhood.

Eventually, Hutchinson’s small prayer circles became large gatherings that drew men as

well as women. Her prayer meeting success generated extreme discomfort among the

colony’s male leaders. Outraged local magistrates, including Governor John Winthrop,

deemed it highly inappropriate for a woman to instruct men in religious matters.

The oppressed had become the oppressors. Winthrop had Hutchinson arrested on charges

of subversion. Throughout the court trial, however, it was evident that Hutchinson’s

“crime” had mainly been acting in traditionally male ways, sharing her ideas in a large

mixed-sex forum. As Winthrop phrased it, she was “an American Jezebel who had gone

a-whoring from God” and who was infecting women with “abominable” ideas regarding

their rights. Officials accused her of violating the fifth religious commandment (“Honor

thy father and mother”) by encouraging dissent against the fathers of the Commonwealth.

Hutchinson also drew controversy with her claim of communication with God, her

opinion that each person should interpret laws as their own conscience dictated, and her

opinion that Native American slavery was wrong.

Anne Hutchinson was banned from Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1638. Along with other

colonists, she then co-founded the town of Portsmouth on Aquidneck Island, which today

is known as Rhode Island. The general area was a relative haven of religious freedom;

just two years earlier, another banished Massachusetts Bay colonist, Roger Williams, had

established the town of Providence. Providence was known to accept Quakers, Jews, and

other religious dissenters.

After Hutchinson’s husband passed away, she relocated again to New Amsterdam. There,

in 1643, she and several of her children were murdered in an attack by natives. No doubt,

Governor Winthrop viewed the difficult death as corroboration of his critique. In 1945,

however, the Massachusetts State Legislature voted to revoke her banishment. The state

now honors Hutchinson with a statue describing her as a “courageous exponent of civil

liberty and religious toleration.”

 

 
Translate Page Into German Translate Page Into French Translate Page Into Italian Translate Page Into Portuguese Translate Page Into Spanish Translate Page Into Japanese Translate Page Into Korean

More Articles

 

 

Search This Site

 

Related Products And FREE Videos





 

More Articles


Navajo Windtalkers Americas Secret Weapon

... degree. One problem was that Nazi Germans were now infiltrating Native American tribes in order to study their languages. (Some posed as art dealers and anthropology students.) Also, a perceived hindrance was that many English terms particularly those used to express modern military ideas did not have ... 

Read Full Article  


Japanese Internment Camps In The United States

... Internment Camps in the United States Just off of US Highway 395, at the foot of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, motorists can find one of the black eyes of American history. There stands the Manzanar War Relocation Center in which thousands of Japanese-Americans were confined during World War II. It is ... 

Read Full Article  


The Botched Bay Of Pigs Invasion

... Administration was embarrassed by this military failure. Some observers said that not enough force had been provided; the 1,400 US troops were too many to conduct guerrilla warfare, but too few to overcome Castro s forces. Also, crucial air support a promised umbrella of defense -- was missing; US jets ... 

Read Full Article  


George Washingtons Federal Government

... values of sectarian Cabinet members crystallized. Presidential advisor and staunch Federalist Alexander Hamilton, who had developed national currency and taxation plans, had visions of a strong central bank. This clashed with Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson s ideal of small government. By 1793, each ... 

Read Full Article  


What Caused The Great Depression

... a second term. After Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated in 1933, he instituted a bank holiday. Banks would rest for several days while Congress passed the Emergency Banking Relief Act to stabilize the banking system. The new President told his nation, The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. ... 

Read Full Article