Law and Religion in Colonial America: The Dissenting Colonies - Historical Analysis of Early American Settlements & Religious Freedom for Academic Research
Law and Religion in Colonial America: The Dissenting Colonies - Historical Analysis of Early American Settlements & Religious Freedom for Academic Research

Law and Religion in Colonial America: The Dissenting Colonies - Historical Analysis of Early American Settlements & Religious Freedom for Academic Research

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Law – charters, statutes, judicial decisions, and traditions – mattered in colonial America, and laws about religion mattered a lot. The legal history of colonial America reveals that America has been devoted to the free exercise of religion since well before the First Amendment was ratified. Indeed, the two colonies originally most opposed to religious liberty for anyone who did not share their views, Connecticut and Massachusetts, eventually became bastions of it. By focusing on law, Scott Douglas Gerber offers new insights about each of the five English American colonies founded for religious reasons – Maryland, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Massachusetts – and challenges the conventional view that colonial America had a unified religious history.

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When Samuel Eliot Morrison wrote his history of Harvard University, he downplayed its origins as a school to train Puritan ministers. Indeed, contemporary historians tend to overlook the religious traditions of the America Founding. But not Scott Gerber, who analyzes the religious landscape of Colonial America focusing on Puritan Massachussets, dissident Roger Williams’ Rhode Island, Congregationalist Connecticut, the Quaker State of Pennsylvania and Catholic Maryland in order to explain the roots of American constitutional democracy in the context of sectarian tensions. An important addition to legal and religious scholarship.
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