fbpx
Wikipedia

Roger Williams

Roger Williams (c. 1603 – March 1683)[1] was an English-born New England Puritan minister, theologian, and author who founded Providence Plantations, which became the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations and later the State of Rhode Island. He was a staunch advocate for religious freedom, separation of church and state, and fair dealings with the Native Americans.[2]

Roger Williams
9th President of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
In office
1654–1657
Preceded byNicholas Easton
Succeeded byBenedict Arnold
Chief Officer of Providence and Warwick
In office
1644–1647
Preceded byHimself (as Governor)
Succeeded byJohn Coggeshall (as President)
Governor of Providence Plantations
In office
1636–1644
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byHimself (as Chief Officer)
Personal details
Bornc. 1603
London, England
Diedbetween 21 January and 15 March 1683 (aged 79)
Providence Plantations
SpouseMary Bernard
Children6
EducationPembroke College, Cambridge
OccupationMinister, statesman, author
Signature

Williams was expelled by the Puritan leaders from the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and he established Providence Plantations in 1636 as a refuge offering what he termed "liberty of conscience". In 1638, he founded the First Baptist Church in America in Providence.[3][4] Williams studied the language of the New England Native Americans and published the first book-length study of it in English.[5]

Early life edit

Roger Williams was born in London, and many historians cite 1603 as the probable year of his birth.[6] His birth records were destroyed when St. Sepulchre church burned during the Great Fire of London,[7] and his entry in American National Biography notes that Williams gave contradictory information about his age throughout his life.[8] His father was James Williams (1562–1620), a merchant tailor in Smithfield, and his mother was Alice Pemberton (1564–1635).

 
Williams attended Pembroke College, Cambridge

At an early age, Williams had a spiritual conversion of which his father disapproved. As an adolescent, he apprenticed under Sir Edward Coke (1552–1634), the famous jurist, and was educated at Charterhouse School under Coke's patronage. Williams later attended Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in 1627.[9] He demonstrated a facility with languages, acquiring familiarity with Latin, Hebrew, Greek, Dutch, and French at an early age. Years later, he tutored John Milton in Dutch and Native American languages in exchange for refresher lessons in Hebrew and Greek.[10][11]

Williams took holy orders in the Church of England in connection with his studies, but he became a Puritan at Cambridge and thus ruined his chance for preferment in the Anglican church. After graduating from Cambridge, he became the chaplain to Sir William Masham. In April 1629, Williams proposed marriage to Jane Whalley, the niece of Lady Joan (Cromwell) Barrington, but she declined.[12] Later that year, he married Mary Bernard (1609–76), the daughter of Rev. Richard Bernard, a notable Puritan preacher and author; they were married at the Church of High Laver in Epping Forest, a few miles east of London.[13] They had six children, all born in America: Mary, Freeborn, Providence, Mercy, Daniel, and Joseph.

Williams knew that Puritan leaders planned to immigrate to the New World. He did not join the first wave of settlers, but later decided that he could not remain in England under the administration of Archbishop William Laud. Williams regarded the Church of England as corrupt and false, and he had arrived at the Separatist position by 1630; on December 1, he and his wife boarded the Boston-bound Lyon in Bristol.[14]

First years in America edit

Arrival in Boston edit

On February 5, 1631, the Lyon anchored in Nantasket outside of Boston.[15] The church of Boston offered him the opportunity to serve during the vacancy of Rev. John Wilson, who had returned to England to bring his wife back to America.[16] Williams declined the position on grounds that it was "an unseparated church." In addition, he asserted that civil magistrates must not punish any sort of "breach of the first table" of the Ten Commandments such as idolatry, Sabbath-breaking, false worship, and blasphemy, and that individuals should be free to follow their own convictions in religious matters. These three principles later became central tenets of Williams' teachings and writings.

Salem and Plymouth edit

 
The Jonathan Corwin House was long purported to be Williams' residence in Salem.[17]

As a Separatist, Williams considered the Church of England irredeemably corrupt and believed that one must completely separate from it to establish a new church for the true and pure worship of God. The Salem church was also inclined to Separatism, and they invited him to become their teacher. In response, leaders in Boston vigorously protested, leading Salem to withdraw its offer. As the summer of 1631 ended, Williams moved to Plymouth Colony where he was welcomed, and informally assisted the minister. At Plymouth, he regularly preached. Plymouth Governor William Bradford wrote that "his teachings were well approved."[18]

After a time, Williams decided that the Plymouth church was not sufficiently separated from the Church of England. Furthermore, his contact with the Narragansett Native Americans had caused him to question the validity of colonial charters that did not include legitimate purchase of Native American land. Governor Bradford later wrote that Williams fell "into some strange opinions which caused some controversy between the church and him."[19]

In December 1632, Williams wrote a lengthy tract that openly condemned the King's charters and questioned the right of Plymouth to the land without first buying it from the Native Americans. He even charged that King James had uttered a "solemn lie" in claiming that he was the first Christian monarch to have discovered the land. Williams moved back to Salem by the fall of 1633 and was welcomed by Rev. Samuel Skelton as an unofficial assistant.

Litigation and exile edit

 
The Banishment of Roger Williams (c. 1850) by Peter F. Rothermel

The Massachusetts Bay authorities were not pleased at Williams' return. In December 1633, they summoned him to appear before the General Court in Boston to defend his tract attacking the King and the charter. The issue was smoothed out, and the tract disappeared forever, probably burned. In August 1634, Williams became acting pastor of the Salem church, the Rev. Skelton having died. In March 1635, he was again ordered to appear before the General Court, and he was summoned yet again for the Court's July term to answer for "erroneous" and "dangerous opinions." The Court finally ordered that he be removed from his church position.

This latest controversy welled up as the town of Salem petitioned the General Court to annex some land on Marblehead Neck. The Court refused to consider the request unless the church in Salem removed Williams. The church felt that this order violated their independence, and sent a letter of protest to the other churches. However, the letter was not read publicly in those churches, and the General Court refused to seat the delegates from Salem at the next session. Support for Williams began to wane under this pressure, and he withdrew from the church and began meeting with a few of his most ardent followers in his home.

Finally, the General Court tried Williams in October 1635 and convicted him of sedition and heresy. They declared that he was spreading "diverse, new, and dangerous opinions"[20] and ordered that he be banished. The execution of the order was delayed because Williams was ill and winter was approaching, so he was allowed to stay temporarily, provided that he ceased publicly teaching his opinions. He did not comply with this demand, and the sheriff came in January 1636, only to discover that he had slipped away three days earlier during a blizzard. He traveled 55 miles on foot through the deep snow, from Salem to Raynham, Massachusetts, where the local Wampanoags offered him shelter at their winter camp. Sachem Massasoit hosted Williams there for the three months until spring.

Settlement at Providence edit

 
The Landing of Roger Williams in 1636 (1857) by Alonzo Chappel depicts Williams crossing the Seekonk River

In the spring of 1636, Williams and a number of others from Salem began a new settlement on land which he had bought from Massasoit in Rumford. After settling, however, Plymouth Governor William Bradford sent him a friendly letter which nonetheless warned him that he was still within jurisdiction of Plymouth Colony and concerned that this might antagonize the leaders in Boston.

Accordingly, Williams and Thomas Angell crossed the Seekonk River in search of a new location suitable for settlement. Upon reaching the shore, Williams and Angell were met by Narragansett people who greeted them with the words "What cheer, Netop" (transl. Hello, friend). The settlers then continued eastward along the Providence River, where they encountered a cove and freshwater spring. Finding the area suitable for settlement, Williams acquired the tract from sachems Canonicus and Miantonomi.[21] Here, Williams and his followers established a new, permanent settlement, convinced that divine providence had brought them there. They named it Providence Plantations.[22]

 
In 1936, on the 300th anniversary of the settlement of Rhode Island in 1636, the U.S. Post Office issued a commemorative stamp, depicting Roger Williams

Williams wanted his settlement to be a haven for those "distressed of conscience," and it soon attracted a growing number of families who did not see eye-to-eye with the leaders in Massachusetts Bay. From the beginning, a majority vote of the heads of households governed the new settlement, but only in civil things. Newcomers could also be admitted to full citizenship by a majority vote. In August 1637, a new town agreement again restricted the government to civil things. In 1640, 39 freemen (men who had full citizenship and voting rights) signed another agreement that declared their determination "still to hold forth liberty of conscience." Thus, Williams founded the first place in modern history where citizenship and religion were separate, providing religious liberty and separation of church and state. This was combined with the principle of majoritarian democracy.

 
First Baptist Church in America which Williams co-founded in 1638

In November 1637, the General Court of Massachusetts exiled a number of families during the Antinomian Controversy, including Anne Hutchinson and her followers. John Clarke was among them, and he learned from Williams that Rhode Island might be purchased from the Narragansetts; Williams helped him to make the purchase, along with William Coddington and others, and they established the settlement of Portsmouth. In spring 1638, some of those settlers split away and founded the nearby settlement of Newport, also situated on Rhode Island (now called Aquidneck).

In 1638, Williams and about 12 others were baptized and formed a congregation. Today, Williams' congregation is recognized as the First Baptist Church in America.[23]

Pequot War and relations with Native Americans edit

In the meantime, the Pequot War had broken out. Massachusetts Bay asked for Williams' help, which he gave despite his exile, and he became the Bay colony's eyes and ears, and also dissuaded the Narragansetts from joining with the Pequots. Instead, the Narragansetts allied themselves with the colonists and helped to defeat the Pequots in 1637–38.

Williams formed firm friendships and developed deep trust among the Native American tribes, especially the Narragansetts. He was able to keep the peace between the Native Americans and the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations for nearly 40 years by his constant mediation and negotiation. He twice surrendered himself as a hostage to the Native Americans to guarantee the safe return of a great sachem from a summons to a court: Pessicus in 1645 and Metacom ("King Philip") in 1671. The Native Americans trusted Williams more than any other Colonist, and he proved trustworthy.

 
A mid-19th century depiction of Williams meeting with Narragansett leaders

Securing Charters edit

Williams arrived in London in the midst of the English Civil War. Puritans held power in London, and he was able to obtain a charter through the offices of Sir Henry Vane the Younger despite strenuous opposition from Massachusetts' agents. His book A Key into the Language of America proved crucial to the success of his charter, albeit indirectly.[24][25] It was published in 1643 in London and combined a phrase-book with observations about life and culture as an aid to communicate with the Native Americans of New England. It covered everything from salutations to death and burial. Williams also sought to correct the attitudes of superiority displayed by the colonists towards Native Americans:

Boast not proud English, of thy birth & blood;

Thy brother Indian is by birth as Good. Of one blood God made Him, and Thee and All,

As wise, as fair, as strong, as personal.

Gregory Dexter printed the book, which was the first book-length study of a Native American language. In England, it was well received by readers who were curious about the Native American tribes of the New World.[26]

Williams secured his charter from Parliament for Providence Plantations in July 1644, after which he published his most famous book The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience. The publication produced a great uproar; between 1644 and 1649, at least 60 pamphlets were published addressing the work's arguments. Parliament responded to Williams on August 9, 1644, by ordering the public hangman to burn all copies. By this time, however, Williams was already on his way back to New England where he arrived with his charter in September.[26]

 
Return of Roger Williams from England with the First Charter from Parliament for Providence Plantations in July 1644

It took Williams several years to unify the settlements of Narragansett Bay under a single government, given the opposition of William Coddington. The settlements of Providence, Portsmouth, Newport, and Warwick finally united in 1647 into the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. Freedom of conscience was again proclaimed, and the colony became a safe haven for people who were persecuted for their beliefs, including Baptists, Quakers, and Jews. However, Coddington disliked Williams and did not enjoy his position of subordination under the new charter government. He sailed to England and returned to Rhode Island in 1651 with his own patent making him "Governor for Life" over Rhode Island and Conanicut Island.[citation needed]

As a result, Providence, Warwick, and Coddington's opponents on the island dispatched Williams and John Clarke to England, seeking to cancel Coddington's commission. Williams sold his trading post at Cocumscussec (near Wickford, Rhode Island) to pay for his journey even though it had provided his primary source of income. He and Clarke succeeded in rescinding Coddington's patent, with Clarke remaining in England for the following decade to protect the colonists' interests and secure a new charter. Williams returned to America in 1654 and was immediately elected the colony's president. He subsequently served in many offices in town and colonial governments.[citation needed]

Slavery edit

Williams did not write extensively about slavery. He consistently expressed disapproval of it, though generally he did not object to the enslavement of captured enemy combatants for a fixed duration, a practice that was the normal course of warfare in that time.[27] Williams struggled with the morality of slavery and raised his concerns in letters to Massachusetts Bay Governor John Winthrop concerning the treatment of the Pequots during the Pequot War (1636–1638).[28][29] In these letters, he requested Winthrop to prevent the enslavement of Pequot women and children, as well as to direct the colonial militia to spare them during the fighting.[30][31][32] In another letter to Winthrop written on July 31, 1637, Williams conceded that the capture and indenture of remaining Pequot women and children would "lawfully" ensure that remaining enemy combatants were "weakned and despoild", but pleaded that their indenture not be permanent.[33][34][35]

Despite his reservations, Williams formed part of the colonial delegation sent to conduct negotiations at the end of the Pequot War, where the fates of the captured Pequots were decided upon between the colonists of New England and their Native American allies the Narragansetts, Mohegans, and Niantics.[36] Williams reported to Winthrop that he and Narragansett sachem Miantonomoh discussed what to do with a group of captured Pequots; initially they discussed the possibility of distributing them as slaves among the four victorious parties, which Miantonomoh "liked well", though at Williams' suggestion, the non-combatants were relocated to an island in Niantic territory "because most of them were families".[37] Miantonomoh later requested an enslaved female Pequot from Winthrop, to which Williams objected, stating that "he had his share sent to him". Instead, Williams suggested that he "buy one or two of some English man".[38]

In July 1637, Winthrop gave Williams a Pequot boy as an indentured servant. The child had been captured by Israel Stoughton in Connecticut.[39] Williams renamed the child "Will."[40]

Some of the Native American allies aided in the export of enslaved Pequots to the West Indies, while others disagreed with the practice, believing that they should have been given land and provisions to contribute to the wellbeing of colonial settlements.[36] Many enslaved Pequots frequently ran away, where they were taken in by surrounding Native American settlements.[38][36] Williams aided colonists in distributing and selling Pequot captives and fielded requests from colonists to track down and return runaways,[41] using his connections with Miantonomoh, Ayanemo, and other Native leaders to find escapees.[42] Williams recorded experiences of abuse and rape recounted by the Natives he apprehended, and Margaret Ellen Newell speculates that Williams’ letters encouraging Winthrop to limit terms of servitude were informed by his acquaintance with escapees.[41]

In 1641, the Massachusetts Bay Colony passed laws sanctioning slavery.[43] In response, under Williams' leadership, Providence Plantations passed a law in 1652 restricting the amount of time for which an individual could be held in servitude and tried to prevent the importation of slaves from Africa.[28] The law established terms for slavery that mirrored that of indentured servitude; enslavement was to be limited in duration and not passed down to children.[27] Upon the unification of the mainland and island settlements, residents of the island refused to accept this law, ensuring that it became dead legislation.[44]

Tensions escalated with the Narragansetts during King Philip's War, despite Williams' efforts to maintain peace, during which his home was burned to the ground.[28] During the war, Williams led the committee responsible for processing and selling Rhode Island's Native American captives into slavery.[45][46] Williams' committee recommended that Providence allow residents to keep Native American slaves in spite of earlier municipal statutes. The committee appraised the prices of various Native American captives and brokered their sale to residents. Williams' son transported additional captives to be sold in Newport. Williams also organized the trial and execution of a captured Native American man who had been a ring leader in the war.[47]

Relations with the Baptists edit

Ezekiel Holliman baptized Williams in late 1638. A few years later, Dr. John Clarke established the First Baptist Church in Newport, Rhode Island, and both Roger Williams and John Clarke became the founders of the Baptist faith in America.[48] Williams did not affiliate himself with any church, but he remained interested in the Baptists, agreeing with their rejection of infant baptism and most other matters. Both enemies and admirers sometimes called him a "Seeker," associating him with a heretical movement that accepted Socinianism and Universal Reconciliation, but Williams rejected both of these ideas.[49]

King Philip's War and death edit

 
Williams' final resting place in Prospect Terrace Park
 
The "Roger Williams Root"

King Philip's War (1675–1676) pitted the colonists against the Wampanoags, along with some of the Narragansetts with whom Williams had previously maintained good relations. Williams was elected captain of Providence's militia, even though he was in his 70s. On March 29, 1676, Narragansetts led by Canonchet burned Providence; nearly the entire town was destroyed, including Williams' home.[50]

Williams died sometime between January 16 and March 16, 1683[51] and was buried on his own property.[52] Fifty years later, his house collapsed into the cellar and the location of his grave was forgotten.[52]

Providence residents were determined to raise a monument in his honor in 1860; they "dug up the spot where they believed the remains to be, they found only nails, teeth, and bone fragments. They also found an apple tree root," which they thought followed the shape of a human body; the root followed the shape of a spine, split at the hips, bent at the knees, and turned up at the feet.[53]

The Rhode Island Historical Society has cared for this tree root since 1860 as representative of Rhode Island's founder. Since 2007, the root has been displayed at the John Brown House.[54]

The few remains discovered alongside the root were reinterred in Prospect Terrace Park in 1939 at the base of a large stone monument.

Separation of church and state edit

Williams was a staunch advocate of the separation of church and state. He was convinced that civil government had no basis for meddling in matters of religious belief. He declared that the state should concern itself only with matters of civil order, not with religious belief, and he rejected any attempt by civil authorities to enforce the "first Table" of the Ten Commandments, those commandments that deal with an individual's relationship with and belief in God. Williams believed that the state must confine itself to the commandments dealing with the relations between people: murder, theft, adultery, lying, honoring parents, etc.[55] He wrote of a "hedge or wall of Separation between the Garden of the Church and the Wilderness of the world." Thomas Jefferson later used the metaphor in his 1801 Letter to Danbury Baptists.[56][57]

Williams considered the state's sponsorship of religious beliefs or practice to be "forced worship", declaring "Forced worship stinks in God's nostrils."[58] He also believed Constantine the Great to be a worse enemy to Christianity than Nero because the subsequent state involvement in religious matters corrupted Christianity and led to the death of the first Christian church and the first Christian communities. He described laws concerning an individual's religious beliefs as "rape of the soul" and spoke of the "oceans of blood" shed as a result of trying to command conformity.[59] The moral principles in the Scriptures ought to guide civil magistrates, he believed, but he observed that well-ordered, just, and civil governments existed even where Christianity was not present. Thus, all governments had to maintain civil order and justice, but Williams decided that none had a warrant to promote or repress any religious views. Most of his contemporaries criticized his ideas as a prescription for chaos and anarchy, and the vast majority believed that each nation must have its national church and could require that dissenters conform.[citation needed]

Writings edit

 
In 1643, Williams published A Key into the Language of America, the first published study of an Native American language.

Williams's career as an author began with A Key into the Language of America (London, 1643), written during his first voyage to England. His next publication was Mr. Cotton's Letter lately Printed, Examined and Answered (London, 1644; reprinted in Publications of the Narragansett Club, vol. ii, along with John Cotton's letter which it answered). His most famous work is The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience (published in 1644), considered by some to be one of the best defenses of liberty of conscience.[60]

An anonymous pamphlet was published in London in 1644 entitled Queries of Highest Consideration Proposed to Mr. Tho. Goodwin, Mr. Phillip Nye, Mr. Wil. Bridges, Mr. Jer. Burroughs, Mr. Sidr. Simpson, all Independents, etc. which is now ascribed to Williams. These "Independents" were members of the Westminster Assembly; their Apologetical Narration sought a way between extreme Separatism and Presbyterianism, and their prescription was to accept the state church model of Massachusetts Bay.

Williams published The Bloody Tenent yet more Bloudy: by Mr. Cotton's Endeavor to wash it white in the Blood of the Lamb; of whose precious Blood, spilt in the Bloud of his Servants; and of the Blood of Millions spilt in former and later Wars for Conscience sake, that most Bloody Tenent of Persecution for cause of Conscience, upon, a second Tryal is found more apparently and more notoriously guilty, etc. (London, 1652) during his second visit to England. This work reiterated and amplified the arguments in Bloudy Tenent, but it has the advantage of being written in answer to Cotton's A Reply to Mr. Williams his Examination.[61]

Other works by Williams include:

  • The Hireling Ministry None of Christ's (London, 1652)
  • Experiments of Spiritual Life and Health, and their Preservatives (London, 1652; reprinted Providence, 1863)
  • George Fox Digged out of his Burrowes (Boston, 1676) (discusses Quakerism with its different belief in the "inner light," which Williams considered heretical)

A volume of his letters is included in the Narragansett Club edition of Williams' Works (7 vols., Providence, 1866–74), and a volume was edited by John Russell Bartlett (1882).

  • The Correspondence of Roger Williams, 2 vols., Rhode Island Historical Society, 1988, edited by Glenn W. LaFantasie

Brown University's John Carter Brown Library has long housed a 234-page volume referred to as the "Roger Williams Mystery Book".[62] The margins of this book are filled with notations in handwritten code, believed to be the work of Roger Williams. In 2012, Brown University undergraduate Lucas Mason-Brown cracked the code and uncovered conclusive historical evidence attributing its authorship to Williams.[63] Translations are revealing transcriptions of a geographical text, a medical text, and 20 pages of original notes addressing the issue of infant baptism.[64] Mason-Brown has since discovered more writings by Williams employing a separate code in the margins of a rare edition of the Eliot Indian Bible.[65]

Legacy edit

Tributes to Roger Williams
 
Roger Williams Middle School in Providence

Williams' defense of the Native Americans, his accusations that Puritans had reproduced the "evils" of the Anglican Church, and his insistence that England pay the Native Americans for their land all put him at the center of many political debates during his life. He was considered an important historical figure of religious liberty at the time of American independence, and he was a key influence on the thinking of the Founding Fathers.

Tributes edit

Tributes to Williams include:

Slate Rock edit

Slate Rock
 
1832 painting of Slate Rock by Edward L. Peckham
 
Memorial in Roger Williams Square

Slate Rock is a prominent boulder on the west shore of the Seekonk River (near the current Gano Park) that was once one of Providence's most important historic landmarks.[66][67][68] It was believed to be the spot where the Narragansetts greeted Williams with the famous phrase "What cheer, netop?" The historic rock was accidentally blown up by city workers in 1877.[66][67] They were attempting to expose a buried portion of the stone, but used too much dynamite and it was "blasted to pieces."[66] A memorial in Roger Williams Square commemorates the location.[66][68][67]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Roger Williams (American religious leader)". Encyclopaedia Britannica. from the original on February 6, 2017. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  2. ^ "Roger Williams". History.com. A&E Television Networks. 2009. from the original on January 27, 2018. Retrieved January 26, 2018.
  3. ^ "Our History". American Baptist Churches USA. from the original on April 4, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  4. ^ "First Baptist Meetinghouse, 75 North Main Street, Providence, Providence County, RI". Library of Congress. from the original on January 13, 2017. Retrieved January 12, 2017.
  5. ^ Lawson, Russell M. (April 2, 2013). Encyclopedia of American Indian Issues Today [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-313-38145-4.
  6. ^ Gaustad, Edwin S. (May 15, 2005). Roger Williams. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-976053-4.
  7. ^ Winslow, Ola Elizabeth (1957). Master Roger Williams: A Biography. Macmillan. ISBN 9780374986827.
  8. ^ LaFantasie, Glenn W. (1999). Garraty, John A.; Carnes, Mark C. (eds.). American National Biography. Vol. 23. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 497–501. ISBN 9780195127966.
  9. ^ "Williams, Roger (WLMS623R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  10. ^ Pfeiffer, Robert H. (April 1955). "The Teaching of Hebrew in Colonial America". The Jewish Quarterly Review. pp. 363–73
  11. ^ An Open Society: A Biography of Roger Williams
  12. ^ Barry, John M. (2012). Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul: Church, State, and the Birth of Liberty. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-02305-9. pp. 73-74, pp. 136-139.
  13. ^ "Wife of Roger Williams: Founder of Providence Plantation". 5 October 2007. from the original on 6 November 2018. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
  14. ^ ""A Brief history of Jacob Belfry" Page 40, 1888". from the original on March 5, 2014. Retrieved February 28, 2014.
  15. ^ Allison, Amy (2013). Roger Williams. Infobase Learning. ISBN 978-1-4381-4450-4.
  16. ^ Barry, John M. (January 2012). "God, Government and Roger Williams' Big Idea". Smithsonian. from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved January 27, 2018.
  17. ^ Goff, John (September 16, 2009). Salem's Witch House: A Touchstone to Antiquity. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61423-286-5.
  18. ^ Straus, Oscar Solomon (1894). Roger Williams; the Pioneer of Religious Liberty. Century Company. p. 30.
  19. ^ Quoted in Edwin Gaustad,Liberty of Conscience: Roger Williams in America Judson Press, 1999, pg. 28.
  20. ^ LaFantasie, Glenn W., ed. The Correspondence of Roger Williams, University Press of New England, 1988, Vol. 1, pp.12–23.
  21. ^ Cady, John Hutchins (1957). The civic and architectural development of Providence, 1636-1950. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. Providence, R.I. : Book Shop.
  22. ^ An Album of Rhode Island History by Patrick T. Conley
  23. ^ King, Henry Melville; Wilcox, Charles Field (1908). Historical Catalogue of the Members of the First Baptist Church in Providence, Rhode Island. Townsend, F.H., Printer.
  24. ^ Gaustad, Edwin S.,Liberty of Conscience (Judson Press, 1999), pg. 62
  25. ^ Ernst, Roger Williams: New England Firebrand (Macmillan, 1932), pp. 227-228
  26. ^ a b Warren, James A. (June 18, 2019). God, War, and Providence: The Epic Struggle of Roger Williams and the Narragansett Indians against the Puritans of New England. Simon and Schuster. p. 150. ISBN 978-1-5011-8042-2.
  27. ^ a b J. Stanley, Lemons (2002). "Rhode Island and the Slave Trade" (PDF). Rhode Island History. 60 (4). Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  28. ^ a b c "Slavery - Roger Williams Initiative". www.findingrogerwilliams.com. Retrieved April 20, 2021.
  29. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  30. ^ Williams, Roger (May 15, 1637). "Letter to Sir Henry Vane and John Winthrop from Roger Williams- May 15, 1637". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
  31. ^ Williams, Roger (June 21, 1637). "Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams- June 21, 2021". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
  32. ^ Williams, Roger (July 15, 1637). "Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams- July 15, 1637". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
  33. ^ Williams, Roger (July 31, 1637). "Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams- July 31, 1637". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
  34. ^ Williams, Roger (February 28, 1638). "Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams- February 28, 1638". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
  35. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  36. ^ a b c Gallay, Alan (January 1, 2009). Indian Slavery in Colonial America. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 40–42. ISBN 978-0-8032-2200-7.
  37. ^ Williams, Roger (July 10, 1637). "Letter to John Winthrop From Roger Williams July 10, 1637 (2)". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  38. ^ a b Williams, Roger (August 12, 1637). "Letter to John Winthrop From Roger Williams- August 12, 1637". Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  39. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. pp. 68–69. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  40. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  41. ^ a b Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  42. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  43. ^ PBS. Africans in America: the Terrible Transformation. "From Indentured Servitude to Racial Slavery." Accessed September 13, 2011.
  44. ^ McLoughlin, William G. Rhode Island: A History (W.W. Norton, 1978), p. 26.
  45. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  46. ^ Clark-Pujara, Christy (2018). Dark Work: The Business of Slavery in Rhode Island. New York University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-4798-5563-6. Project MUSE book 49199.
  47. ^ Newell, Margret Ellen (2015). Brethren by Nature: New England Indians, Colonists, and the Origins of American Slavery. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. pp. 170–171. ISBN 978-0-8014-5648-0.
  48. ^ . Redwood Library. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  49. ^ Clifton E. Olmstead (1960): History of Religion in the United States. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., p. 106
  50. ^ Mandell, Daniel R. (September 1, 2010). King Philip's War: Colonial Expansion, Native Resistance, and the End of Indian Sovereignty. JHU Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-8018-9948-5.
  51. ^ "Roger Williams Biography". www.rogerwilliams.org. Retrieved July 12, 2023.
  52. ^ a b "Today in History - February 5". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved July 12, 2023.
  53. ^ Bryant, Sparkle (October 19, 2015). "The Tree Root That Ate Roger Williams". NPS News Releases. National Park Service. from the original on April 8, 2018. Retrieved January 27, 2018.
  54. ^ Rhode Island Historical Society, "Body, Body, Who's Got the Body? Where in the World IS Roger Williams", New and Notes, (Spring/Winter, 2008), pg. 4.
  55. ^ Hall (1998). Separating Church and State: Roger Williams and Religious Liberty. University of Illinois Press. p. 77.
  56. ^ Barry, John M. (January 2012). "God, Government and Roger Williams' Big Idea". Smithsonian. from the original on December 15, 2017. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  57. ^ "Everson and the Wall of Separation". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. Pew Research Center. May 14, 2009. from the original on December 14, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  58. ^ Lemons, Stanley. "Roger Williams Champion of Religious Liberty". Providence, RI City Archives. from the original on 29 May 2014. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  59. ^ Chana B. Cox (2006). Liberty: God's Gift to Humanity. Lexington Books. p. 26. ISBN 9780739114421. from the original on February 27, 2017. Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  60. ^ James Emanuel Ernst, Roger Williams, New England Firebrand (Macmillan Co., Rhode Island, 1932), pg. 246 [1] 4 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  61. ^ Publications of the Narragansett Club, vol. ii
  62. ^ Mason-Brown, Lucas (July 11, 2012). "Cracking the Code: Infant Baptism and Roger Williams". JCB Books Speak. from the original on June 18, 2013. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
  63. ^ Fischer, Suzanne (April 9, 2012). "Personal Tech for the 17th Century". The Atlantic. from the original on September 10, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
  64. ^ McKinney, Michael (March 2012). "Reading Outside the Lines" (PDF). The Providence Journal. (PDF) from the original on July 10, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
  65. ^ Mason-Brown, Lucas (July 11, 2012). "Cracking the Code: Infant Baptism and Roger Williams". JCB Books Speak. Brown University. from the original on June 18, 2013. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
  66. ^ a b c d . Quahog dot org. Archived from the original on May 26, 2021. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  67. ^ a b c . Sowams Heritage Area. January 14, 2019. Archived from the original on May 8, 2021. Retrieved December 23, 2021.
  68. ^ a b Shamgochian, John (August 3, 2020). . Rhode Island Historical Society. Archived from the original on December 23, 2021. Retrieved December 23, 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Barry, John, Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul (New York: Viking Press, 2012).[ISBN missing]
  • Bejan, Teresa, Mere Civility: Disagreement and the Limits of Toleration (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017). Addresses Roger Williams' ideas in dialogue with Hobbes and Locke, and suggests lessons from Williams for how to disagree well in the modern public sphere.[ISBN missing]
  • Brockunier, Samuel. The Irrepressible Democrat, Roger Williams, (1940), popular biography[ISBN missing]
  • Burrage, Henry S. "Why Was Roger Williams Banished?" American Journal of Theology 5 (January 1901): 1–17.
  • Byrd, James P. Jr. The Challenges of Roger Williams: Religious Liberty, Violent Persecution, and the Bible (2002). 286 pp.
  • Davis. Jack L. "Roger Williams among the Narragansett Indians", New England Quarterly, Vol. 43, No. 4 (Dec. 1970), pp. 593–604 in JSTOR
  • Davis, James Calvin. The Moral Theology of Roger Williams: Christian Conviction and Public Ethics. (London: Westminster John Knox, 2004).
  • Elton, Romeo. Life of Roger Williams, the earliest Legislator and true Champion for a Full and Absolute Liberty of Conscience (G.P. Putnam).
  • Field, Jonathan Beecher. "A Key for the Gate: Roger Williams, Parliament, and Providence", New England Quarterly 2007 80(3): 353–382
  • Fisher, Linford D., and J. Stanley Lemons, and Lucas Mason-Brown. Decoding Roger Williams: The Lost Essay of Rhode Island’s Founding Father. (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2014).
  • Gammell, William. Life of Roger Williams, the Founder of the State of Rhode Island (Gould and Lincoln, 1854).
  • Goodman, Nan. "Banishment, Jurisdiction, and Identity in Seventeenth-Century New England: The Case of Roger Williams", Early American Studies, An Interdisciplinary Journal Spring 2009, Vol. 7 Issue 1, pp. 109–139.
  • Gaustad, Edwin, S. Roger Williams (Oxford University Press, 2005). 140 pp. short scholarly biography stressing religion
  • Gaustad, Edwin, S. Roger Williams: Prophet of Liberty (Oxford University Press, 2001).
  • Gaustad, Edwin, S., Liberty of Conscience: Roger Williams in America. (Judson Press, Valley Forge, 1999).
  • Gray, Nicole. "Aurality in Print: Revisiting Roger Williams's A Key into the Language of America". Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 131 (2016): 64–83.
  • Hall, Timothy L. Separating Church and State: Roger Williams and Religious Liberty (1998). 206 pp.
  • Johnson, Alan E. The First American Founder: Roger Williams and Freedom of Conscience (Pittsburgh, PA: Philosophia Publications, 2015). In-depth discussion of Roger Williams's life and work and his influence on the US Founders and later American history.[ISBN missing]
  • Knowles, James D. Memoir of Roger Williams the Founder of the State of Rhode-Island (Lln, Edmands and Co., 1834).
  • Miller, Perry, Roger Williams, A Contribution to the American Tradition, (1953). much debated study; Miller argues that Williams thought was primarily religious, not political as so many of the historians of the 1930s and 1940s had argued.[ISBN missing]
  • Morgan, Edmund S. Roger Williams: the church and the state (1967) 170 pages; short biography by leading scholar
  • Mudge, Z. A. Foot-Prints of Roger Williams: A Biography, with sketches of important events in early New England History, with which he was connected, (Carlton & Lanahan, 1871).
  • Neff, Jimmy D. "Roger Williams: Pious Puritan and Strict Separationist", Journal of Church and State 1996 38(3): 529–546 in EBSCO
  • Phillips, Stephen. "Roger Williams and the Two Tables of the Law", Journal of Church and State 1996 38(3): 547–568 in EBSCO
  • Rowley, Matthew. "'All Pretend an Holy War: Radical Beliefs and the Rejection of Persecution in the Mind of Roger Williams', The Review of Faith & International Affairs 15.2 (2017):66–76.
  • Skaggs, Donald. Roger Williams' Dream for America (1993). 240 pp.
  • Stanley, Alison. "'To Speak With Other Tongues': Linguistics, Colonialism and Identity in 17th Century New England", Comparative American Studies March 2009, Vol. 7 Issue 1, p. 1, 17 pp
  • Winslow, Ola Elizabeth, Master Roger Williams, A Biography. (1957) standard biography
  • Wood, Timothy L. "Kingdom Expectations: The Native American in the Puritan Missiology of John Winthrop and Roger Williams", Fides et Historia 2000 32(1): 39–49

Historiography edit

  • Carlino, Anthony O. "Roger Williams and his Place in History: The Background and the Last Quarter Century", Rhode Island History 2000 58(2): 34–71, historiography
  • Irwin, Raymond D. "A Man for all Eras: The Changing Historical Image of Roger Williams, 1630–1993", Fides Et Historia 1994 26(3): 6–23, historiography
  • Morgan, Edmund S. " Miller's Williams", New England Quarterly, Vol. 38, No. 4 (Dec. 1965), pp. 513–523 in JSTOR
  • Moore, Leroy Jr. "Roger Williams and the Historians", Church History 1963 32(4): 432–451 in JSTOR
  • Peace, Nancy E. "Roger Williams: A Historiographical Essay", Rhode Island History 1976 35(4): 103–113,

Primary sources edit

  • Williams, Roger. The Complete Writings of Roger Williams, 7 vols. 1963
  • Williams, Roger. The Correspondence of Roger Williams, 2 vols. ed. by Glenn W. LaFantasie, 1988

Fiction edit

  • Settle, Mary Lee, I, Roger Williams: A Novel, W. W. Norton & Company, Reprint edition (2002).
  • George, James W., The Prophet and the Witch: A Novel of Puritan New England, Amazon Digital Services (2017).

External links edit

roger, williams, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1603, march, 1683, english, born, england, puritan, minister, theologian, author, founded, providence, plantations, which, became, colony, rhode, island, providence, plantations, later, state, rhode, islan. For other people named Roger Williams see Roger Williams disambiguation Roger Williams c 1603 March 1683 1 was an English born New England Puritan minister theologian and author who founded Providence Plantations which became the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations and later the State of Rhode Island He was a staunch advocate for religious freedom separation of church and state and fair dealings with the Native Americans 2 Roger WilliamsRoger Williams 1872 9th President of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence PlantationsIn office 1654 1657Preceded byNicholas EastonSucceeded byBenedict ArnoldChief Officer of Providence and WarwickIn office 1644 1647Preceded byHimself as Governor Succeeded byJohn Coggeshall as President Governor of Providence PlantationsIn office 1636 1644Preceded byposition establishedSucceeded byHimself as Chief Officer Personal detailsBornc 1603 London EnglandDiedbetween 21 January and 15 March 1683 aged 79 Providence PlantationsSpouseMary BernardChildren6EducationPembroke College CambridgeOccupationMinister statesman authorSignatureWilliams was expelled by the Puritan leaders from the Massachusetts Bay Colony and he established Providence Plantations in 1636 as a refuge offering what he termed liberty of conscience In 1638 he founded the First Baptist Church in America in Providence 3 4 Williams studied the language of the New England Native Americans and published the first book length study of it in English 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 First years in America 2 1 Arrival in Boston 2 2 Salem and Plymouth 2 3 Litigation and exile 3 Settlement at Providence 3 1 Pequot War and relations with Native Americans 4 Securing Charters 4 1 Slavery 5 Relations with the Baptists 6 King Philip s War and death 7 Separation of church and state 8 Writings 9 Legacy 9 1 Tributes 9 2 Slate Rock 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 Historiography 12 2 Primary sources 12 3 Fiction 13 External linksEarly life editRoger Williams was born in London and many historians cite 1603 as the probable year of his birth 6 His birth records were destroyed when St Sepulchre church burned during the Great Fire of London 7 and his entry in American National Biography notes that Williams gave contradictory information about his age throughout his life 8 His father was James Williams 1562 1620 a merchant tailor in Smithfield and his mother was Alice Pemberton 1564 1635 nbsp Williams attended Pembroke College CambridgeAt an early age Williams had a spiritual conversion of which his father disapproved As an adolescent he apprenticed under Sir Edward Coke 1552 1634 the famous jurist and was educated at Charterhouse School under Coke s patronage Williams later attended Pembroke College Cambridge where he received a Bachelor of Arts in 1627 9 He demonstrated a facility with languages acquiring familiarity with Latin Hebrew Greek Dutch and French at an early age Years later he tutored John Milton in Dutch and Native American languages in exchange for refresher lessons in Hebrew and Greek 10 11 Williams took holy orders in the Church of England in connection with his studies but he became a Puritan at Cambridge and thus ruined his chance for preferment in the Anglican church After graduating from Cambridge he became the chaplain to Sir William Masham In April 1629 Williams proposed marriage to Jane Whalley the niece of Lady Joan Cromwell Barrington but she declined 12 Later that year he married Mary Bernard 1609 76 the daughter of Rev Richard Bernard a notable Puritan preacher and author they were married at the Church of High Laver in Epping Forest a few miles east of London 13 They had six children all born in America Mary Freeborn Providence Mercy Daniel and Joseph Williams knew that Puritan leaders planned to immigrate to the New World He did not join the first wave of settlers but later decided that he could not remain in England under the administration of Archbishop William Laud Williams regarded the Church of England as corrupt and false and he had arrived at the Separatist position by 1630 on December 1 he and his wife boarded the Boston bound Lyon in Bristol 14 First years in America editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roger Williams news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Arrival in Boston edit On February 5 1631 the Lyon anchored in Nantasket outside of Boston 15 The church of Boston offered him the opportunity to serve during the vacancy of Rev John Wilson who had returned to England to bring his wife back to America 16 Williams declined the position on grounds that it was an unseparated church In addition he asserted that civil magistrates must not punish any sort of breach of the first table of the Ten Commandments such as idolatry Sabbath breaking false worship and blasphemy and that individuals should be free to follow their own convictions in religious matters These three principles later became central tenets of Williams teachings and writings Salem and Plymouth edit nbsp The Jonathan Corwin House was long purported to be Williams residence in Salem 17 As a Separatist Williams considered the Church of England irredeemably corrupt and believed that one must completely separate from it to establish a new church for the true and pure worship of God The Salem church was also inclined to Separatism and they invited him to become their teacher In response leaders in Boston vigorously protested leading Salem to withdraw its offer As the summer of 1631 ended Williams moved to Plymouth Colony where he was welcomed and informally assisted the minister At Plymouth he regularly preached Plymouth Governor William Bradford wrote that his teachings were well approved 18 After a time Williams decided that the Plymouth church was not sufficiently separated from the Church of England Furthermore his contact with the Narragansett Native Americans had caused him to question the validity of colonial charters that did not include legitimate purchase of Native American land Governor Bradford later wrote that Williams fell into some strange opinions which caused some controversy between the church and him 19 In December 1632 Williams wrote a lengthy tract that openly condemned the King s charters and questioned the right of Plymouth to the land without first buying it from the Native Americans He even charged that King James had uttered a solemn lie in claiming that he was the first Christian monarch to have discovered the land Williams moved back to Salem by the fall of 1633 and was welcomed by Rev Samuel Skelton as an unofficial assistant Litigation and exile edit nbsp The Banishment of Roger Williams c 1850 by Peter F RothermelThe Massachusetts Bay authorities were not pleased at Williams return In December 1633 they summoned him to appear before the General Court in Boston to defend his tract attacking the King and the charter The issue was smoothed out and the tract disappeared forever probably burned In August 1634 Williams became acting pastor of the Salem church the Rev Skelton having died In March 1635 he was again ordered to appear before the General Court and he was summoned yet again for the Court s July term to answer for erroneous and dangerous opinions The Court finally ordered that he be removed from his church position This latest controversy welled up as the town of Salem petitioned the General Court to annex some land on Marblehead Neck The Court refused to consider the request unless the church in Salem removed Williams The church felt that this order violated their independence and sent a letter of protest to the other churches However the letter was not read publicly in those churches and the General Court refused to seat the delegates from Salem at the next session Support for Williams began to wane under this pressure and he withdrew from the church and began meeting with a few of his most ardent followers in his home Finally the General Court tried Williams in October 1635 and convicted him of sedition and heresy They declared that he was spreading diverse new and dangerous opinions 20 and ordered that he be banished The execution of the order was delayed because Williams was ill and winter was approaching so he was allowed to stay temporarily provided that he ceased publicly teaching his opinions He did not comply with this demand and the sheriff came in January 1636 only to discover that he had slipped away three days earlier during a blizzard He traveled 55 miles on foot through the deep snow from Salem to Raynham Massachusetts where the local Wampanoags offered him shelter at their winter camp Sachem Massasoit hosted Williams there for the three months until spring Settlement at Providence editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roger Williams news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Landing of Roger Williams in 1636 1857 by Alonzo Chappel depicts Williams crossing the Seekonk RiverIn the spring of 1636 Williams and a number of others from Salem began a new settlement on land which he had bought from Massasoit in Rumford After settling however Plymouth Governor William Bradford sent him a friendly letter which nonetheless warned him that he was still within jurisdiction of Plymouth Colony and concerned that this might antagonize the leaders in Boston Accordingly Williams and Thomas Angell crossed the Seekonk River in search of a new location suitable for settlement Upon reaching the shore Williams and Angell were met by Narragansett people who greeted them with the words What cheer Netop transl Hello friend The settlers then continued eastward along the Providence River where they encountered a cove and freshwater spring Finding the area suitable for settlement Williams acquired the tract from sachems Canonicus and Miantonomi 21 Here Williams and his followers established a new permanent settlement convinced that divine providence had brought them there They named it Providence Plantations 22 nbsp In 1936 on the 300th anniversary of the settlement of Rhode Island in 1636 the U S Post Office issued a commemorative stamp depicting Roger WilliamsWilliams wanted his settlement to be a haven for those distressed of conscience and it soon attracted a growing number of families who did not see eye to eye with the leaders in Massachusetts Bay From the beginning a majority vote of the heads of households governed the new settlement but only in civil things Newcomers could also be admitted to full citizenship by a majority vote In August 1637 a new town agreement again restricted the government to civil things In 1640 39 freemen men who had full citizenship and voting rights signed another agreement that declared their determination still to hold forth liberty of conscience Thus Williams founded the first place in modern history where citizenship and religion were separate providing religious liberty and separation of church and state This was combined with the principle of majoritarian democracy nbsp First Baptist Church in America which Williams co founded in 1638In November 1637 the General Court of Massachusetts exiled a number of families during the Antinomian Controversy including Anne Hutchinson and her followers John Clarke was among them and he learned from Williams that Rhode Island might be purchased from the Narragansetts Williams helped him to make the purchase along with William Coddington and others and they established the settlement of Portsmouth In spring 1638 some of those settlers split away and founded the nearby settlement of Newport also situated on Rhode Island now called Aquidneck In 1638 Williams and about 12 others were baptized and formed a congregation Today Williams congregation is recognized as the First Baptist Church in America 23 Pequot War and relations with Native Americans edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the meantime the Pequot War had broken out Massachusetts Bay asked for Williams help which he gave despite his exile and he became the Bay colony s eyes and ears and also dissuaded the Narragansetts from joining with the Pequots Instead the Narragansetts allied themselves with the colonists and helped to defeat the Pequots in 1637 38 Williams formed firm friendships and developed deep trust among the Native American tribes especially the Narragansetts He was able to keep the peace between the Native Americans and the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations for nearly 40 years by his constant mediation and negotiation He twice surrendered himself as a hostage to the Native Americans to guarantee the safe return of a great sachem from a summons to a court Pessicus in 1645 and Metacom King Philip in 1671 The Native Americans trusted Williams more than any other Colonist and he proved trustworthy nbsp A mid 19th century depiction of Williams meeting with Narragansett leadersSecuring Charters editWilliams arrived in London in the midst of the English Civil War Puritans held power in London and he was able to obtain a charter through the offices of Sir Henry Vane the Younger despite strenuous opposition from Massachusetts agents His book A Key into the Language of America proved crucial to the success of his charter albeit indirectly 24 25 It was published in 1643 in London and combined a phrase book with observations about life and culture as an aid to communicate with the Native Americans of New England It covered everything from salutations to death and burial Williams also sought to correct the attitudes of superiority displayed by the colonists towards Native Americans Boast not proud English of thy birth amp blood Thy brother Indian is by birth as Good Of one blood God made Him and Thee and All As wise as fair as strong as personal Gregory Dexter printed the book which was the first book length study of a Native American language In England it was well received by readers who were curious about the Native American tribes of the New World 26 Williams secured his charter from Parliament for Providence Plantations in July 1644 after which he published his most famous book The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience The publication produced a great uproar between 1644 and 1649 at least 60 pamphlets were published addressing the work s arguments Parliament responded to Williams on August 9 1644 by ordering the public hangman to burn all copies By this time however Williams was already on his way back to New England where he arrived with his charter in September 26 nbsp Return of Roger Williams from England with the First Charter from Parliament for Providence Plantations in July 1644It took Williams several years to unify the settlements of Narragansett Bay under a single government given the opposition of William Coddington The settlements of Providence Portsmouth Newport and Warwick finally united in 1647 into the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Freedom of conscience was again proclaimed and the colony became a safe haven for people who were persecuted for their beliefs including Baptists Quakers and Jews However Coddington disliked Williams and did not enjoy his position of subordination under the new charter government He sailed to England and returned to Rhode Island in 1651 with his own patent making him Governor for Life over Rhode Island and Conanicut Island citation needed As a result Providence Warwick and Coddington s opponents on the island dispatched Williams and John Clarke to England seeking to cancel Coddington s commission Williams sold his trading post at Cocumscussec near Wickford Rhode Island to pay for his journey even though it had provided his primary source of income He and Clarke succeeded in rescinding Coddington s patent with Clarke remaining in England for the following decade to protect the colonists interests and secure a new charter Williams returned to America in 1654 and was immediately elected the colony s president He subsequently served in many offices in town and colonial governments citation needed Slavery edit Williams did not write extensively about slavery He consistently expressed disapproval of it though generally he did not object to the enslavement of captured enemy combatants for a fixed duration a practice that was the normal course of warfare in that time 27 Williams struggled with the morality of slavery and raised his concerns in letters to Massachusetts Bay Governor John Winthrop concerning the treatment of the Pequots during the Pequot War 1636 1638 28 29 In these letters he requested Winthrop to prevent the enslavement of Pequot women and children as well as to direct the colonial militia to spare them during the fighting 30 31 32 In another letter to Winthrop written on July 31 1637 Williams conceded that the capture and indenture of remaining Pequot women and children would lawfully ensure that remaining enemy combatants were weakned and despoild but pleaded that their indenture not be permanent 33 34 35 Despite his reservations Williams formed part of the colonial delegation sent to conduct negotiations at the end of the Pequot War where the fates of the captured Pequots were decided upon between the colonists of New England and their Native American allies the Narragansetts Mohegans and Niantics 36 Williams reported to Winthrop that he and Narragansett sachem Miantonomoh discussed what to do with a group of captured Pequots initially they discussed the possibility of distributing them as slaves among the four victorious parties which Miantonomoh liked well though at Williams suggestion the non combatants were relocated to an island in Niantic territory because most of them were families 37 Miantonomoh later requested an enslaved female Pequot from Winthrop to which Williams objected stating that he had his share sent to him Instead Williams suggested that he buy one or two of some English man 38 In July 1637 Winthrop gave Williams a Pequot boy as an indentured servant The child had been captured by Israel Stoughton in Connecticut 39 Williams renamed the child Will 40 Some of the Native American allies aided in the export of enslaved Pequots to the West Indies while others disagreed with the practice believing that they should have been given land and provisions to contribute to the wellbeing of colonial settlements 36 Many enslaved Pequots frequently ran away where they were taken in by surrounding Native American settlements 38 36 Williams aided colonists in distributing and selling Pequot captives and fielded requests from colonists to track down and return runaways 41 using his connections with Miantonomoh Ayanemo and other Native leaders to find escapees 42 Williams recorded experiences of abuse and rape recounted by the Natives he apprehended and Margaret Ellen Newell speculates that Williams letters encouraging Winthrop to limit terms of servitude were informed by his acquaintance with escapees 41 In 1641 the Massachusetts Bay Colony passed laws sanctioning slavery 43 In response under Williams leadership Providence Plantations passed a law in 1652 restricting the amount of time for which an individual could be held in servitude and tried to prevent the importation of slaves from Africa 28 The law established terms for slavery that mirrored that of indentured servitude enslavement was to be limited in duration and not passed down to children 27 Upon the unification of the mainland and island settlements residents of the island refused to accept this law ensuring that it became dead legislation 44 Tensions escalated with the Narragansetts during King Philip s War despite Williams efforts to maintain peace during which his home was burned to the ground 28 During the war Williams led the committee responsible for processing and selling Rhode Island s Native American captives into slavery 45 46 Williams committee recommended that Providence allow residents to keep Native American slaves in spite of earlier municipal statutes The committee appraised the prices of various Native American captives and brokered their sale to residents Williams son transported additional captives to be sold in Newport Williams also organized the trial and execution of a captured Native American man who had been a ring leader in the war 47 Relations with the Baptists editEzekiel Holliman baptized Williams in late 1638 A few years later Dr John Clarke established the First Baptist Church in Newport Rhode Island and both Roger Williams and John Clarke became the founders of the Baptist faith in America 48 Williams did not affiliate himself with any church but he remained interested in the Baptists agreeing with their rejection of infant baptism and most other matters Both enemies and admirers sometimes called him a Seeker associating him with a heretical movement that accepted Socinianism and Universal Reconciliation but Williams rejected both of these ideas 49 King Philip s War and death edit nbsp Williams final resting place in Prospect Terrace Park nbsp The Roger Williams Root King Philip s War 1675 1676 pitted the colonists against the Wampanoags along with some of the Narragansetts with whom Williams had previously maintained good relations Williams was elected captain of Providence s militia even though he was in his 70s On March 29 1676 Narragansetts led by Canonchet burned Providence nearly the entire town was destroyed including Williams home 50 Williams died sometime between January 16 and March 16 1683 51 and was buried on his own property 52 Fifty years later his house collapsed into the cellar and the location of his grave was forgotten 52 Providence residents were determined to raise a monument in his honor in 1860 they dug up the spot where they believed the remains to be they found only nails teeth and bone fragments They also found an apple tree root which they thought followed the shape of a human body the root followed the shape of a spine split at the hips bent at the knees and turned up at the feet 53 The Rhode Island Historical Society has cared for this tree root since 1860 as representative of Rhode Island s founder Since 2007 the root has been displayed at the John Brown House 54 The few remains discovered alongside the root were reinterred in Prospect Terrace Park in 1939 at the base of a large stone monument Separation of church and state editWilliams was a staunch advocate of the separation of church and state He was convinced that civil government had no basis for meddling in matters of religious belief He declared that the state should concern itself only with matters of civil order not with religious belief and he rejected any attempt by civil authorities to enforce the first Table of the Ten Commandments those commandments that deal with an individual s relationship with and belief in God Williams believed that the state must confine itself to the commandments dealing with the relations between people murder theft adultery lying honoring parents etc 55 He wrote of a hedge or wall of Separation between the Garden of the Church and the Wilderness of the world Thomas Jefferson later used the metaphor in his 1801 Letter to Danbury Baptists 56 57 Williams considered the state s sponsorship of religious beliefs or practice to be forced worship declaring Forced worship stinks in God s nostrils 58 He also believed Constantine the Great to be a worse enemy to Christianity than Nero because the subsequent state involvement in religious matters corrupted Christianity and led to the death of the first Christian church and the first Christian communities He described laws concerning an individual s religious beliefs as rape of the soul and spoke of the oceans of blood shed as a result of trying to command conformity 59 The moral principles in the Scriptures ought to guide civil magistrates he believed but he observed that well ordered just and civil governments existed even where Christianity was not present Thus all governments had to maintain civil order and justice but Williams decided that none had a warrant to promote or repress any religious views Most of his contemporaries criticized his ideas as a prescription for chaos and anarchy and the vast majority believed that each nation must have its national church and could require that dissenters conform citation needed Writings edit nbsp In 1643 Williams published A Key into the Language of America the first published study of an Native American language Williams s career as an author began with A Key into the Language of America London 1643 written during his first voyage to England His next publication was Mr Cotton s Letter lately Printed Examined and Answered London 1644 reprinted in Publications of the Narragansett Club vol ii along with John Cotton s letter which it answered His most famous work is The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution for Cause of Conscience published in 1644 considered by some to be one of the best defenses of liberty of conscience 60 An anonymous pamphlet was published in London in 1644 entitled Queries of Highest Consideration Proposed to Mr Tho Goodwin Mr Phillip Nye Mr Wil Bridges Mr Jer Burroughs Mr Sidr Simpson all Independents etc which is now ascribed to Williams These Independents were members of the Westminster Assembly their Apologetical Narration sought a way between extreme Separatism and Presbyterianism and their prescription was to accept the state church model of Massachusetts Bay Williams published The Bloody Tenent yet more Bloudy by Mr Cotton s Endeavor to wash it white in the Blood of the Lamb of whose precious Blood spilt in the Bloud of his Servants and of the Blood of Millions spilt in former and later Wars for Conscience sake that most Bloody Tenent of Persecution for cause of Conscience upon a second Tryal is found more apparently and more notoriously guilty etc London 1652 during his second visit to England This work reiterated and amplified the arguments in Bloudy Tenent but it has the advantage of being written in answer to Cotton s A Reply to Mr Williams his Examination 61 Other works by Williams include The Hireling Ministry None of Christ s London 1652 Experiments of Spiritual Life and Health and their Preservatives London 1652 reprinted Providence 1863 George Fox Digged out of his Burrowes Boston 1676 discusses Quakerism with its different belief in the inner light which Williams considered heretical A volume of his letters is included in the Narragansett Club edition of Williams Works 7 vols Providence 1866 74 and a volume was edited by John Russell Bartlett 1882 The Correspondence of Roger Williams 2 vols Rhode Island Historical Society 1988 edited by Glenn W LaFantasieBrown University s John Carter Brown Library has long housed a 234 page volume referred to as the Roger Williams Mystery Book 62 The margins of this book are filled with notations in handwritten code believed to be the work of Roger Williams In 2012 Brown University undergraduate Lucas Mason Brown cracked the code and uncovered conclusive historical evidence attributing its authorship to Williams 63 Translations are revealing transcriptions of a geographical text a medical text and 20 pages of original notes addressing the issue of infant baptism 64 Mason Brown has since discovered more writings by Williams employing a separate code in the margins of a rare edition of the Eliot Indian Bible 65 Legacy editTributes to Roger Williams nbsp Roger Williams University in Bristol Rhode Island nbsp Memorial statue in Roger Williams Park nbsp Roger Williams National Memorial in Providence nbsp Roger Williams Middle School in Providence Williams defense of the Native Americans his accusations that Puritans had reproduced the evils of the Anglican Church and his insistence that England pay the Native Americans for their land all put him at the center of many political debates during his life He was considered an important historical figure of religious liberty at the time of American independence and he was a key influence on the thinking of the Founding Fathers Tributes edit Tributes to Williams include The 1936 commemorative Rhode Island Tercentenary half dollar Roger Williams National Memorial a park in downtown Providence established in 1965 Roger Williams Park Providence Rhode Island and the Roger Williams Park Zoo Roger Williams University in Bristol Rhode Island Roger Williams Dining Hall at the University of Rhode Island Roger Williams Inn the main dining hall at the American Baptists Green Lake Conference Center founded in 1943 in Green Lake Wisconsin Roger Williams Medical Center a hospital in Providence Rhode Island s representative statue in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol added in 1872 A depiction of him on the International Monument to the Reformation in Geneva along with other prominent reformers Roger Williams Middle School a public school in Providence Pembroke College in Brown University was named for Williams alma materSlate Rock edit Slate Rock nbsp 1832 painting of Slate Rock by Edward L Peckham nbsp Memorial in Roger Williams Square Slate Rock is a prominent boulder on the west shore of the Seekonk River near the current Gano Park that was once one of Providence s most important historic landmarks 66 67 68 It was believed to be the spot where the Narragansetts greeted Williams with the famous phrase What cheer netop The historic rock was accidentally blown up by city workers in 1877 66 67 They were attempting to expose a buried portion of the stone but used too much dynamite and it was blasted to pieces 66 A memorial in Roger Williams Square commemorates the location 66 68 67 See also editColony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Rhode Island List of early settlers of Rhode Island John Cotton puritan John Winthrop Joseph Kinnicutt Angell Roger Williams National Memorial Roger Williams ParkReferences edit Roger Williams American religious leader Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Roger Williams History com A amp E Television Networks 2009 Archived from the original on January 27 2018 Retrieved January 26 2018 Our History American Baptist Churches USA Archived from the original on April 4 2017 Retrieved March 22 2017 First Baptist Meetinghouse 75 North Main Street Providence Providence County RI Library of Congress Archived from the original on January 13 2017 Retrieved January 12 2017 Lawson Russell M April 2 2013 Encyclopedia of American Indian Issues Today 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 181 ISBN 978 0 313 38145 4 Gaustad Edwin S May 15 2005 Roger Williams Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 976053 4 Winslow Ola Elizabeth 1957 Master Roger Williams A Biography Macmillan ISBN 9780374986827 LaFantasie Glenn W 1999 Garraty John A Carnes Mark C eds American National Biography Vol 23 New York Oxford University Press pp 497 501 ISBN 9780195127966 Williams Roger WLMS623R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Pfeiffer Robert H April 1955 The Teaching of Hebrew in Colonial America The Jewish Quarterly Review pp 363 73 An Open Society A Biography of Roger Williams Barry John M 2012 Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul Church State and the Birth of Liberty New York Viking ISBN 978 0 670 02305 9 pp 73 74 pp 136 139 Wife of Roger Williams Founder of Providence Plantation 5 October 2007 Archived from the original on 6 November 2018 Retrieved 5 November 2018 A Brief history of Jacob Belfry Page 40 1888 Archived from the original on March 5 2014 Retrieved February 28 2014 Allison Amy 2013 Roger Williams Infobase Learning ISBN 978 1 4381 4450 4 Barry John M January 2012 God Government and Roger Williams Big Idea Smithsonian Archived from the original on January 4 2018 Retrieved January 27 2018 Goff John September 16 2009 Salem s Witch House A Touchstone to Antiquity Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 61423 286 5 Straus Oscar Solomon 1894 Roger Williams the Pioneer of Religious Liberty Century Company p 30 Quoted in Edwin Gaustad Liberty of Conscience Roger Williams in America Judson Press 1999 pg 28 LaFantasie Glenn W ed The Correspondence of Roger Williams University Press of New England 1988 Vol 1 pp 12 23 Cady John Hutchins 1957 The civic and architectural development of Providence 1636 1950 Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center Providence R I Book Shop An Album of Rhode Island History by Patrick T Conley King Henry Melville Wilcox Charles Field 1908 Historical Catalogue of the Members of the First Baptist Church in Providence Rhode Island Townsend F H Printer Gaustad Edwin S Liberty of Conscience Judson Press 1999 pg 62 Ernst Roger Williams New England Firebrand Macmillan 1932 pp 227 228 a b Warren James A June 18 2019 God War and Providence The Epic Struggle of Roger Williams and the Narragansett Indians against the Puritans of New England Simon and Schuster p 150 ISBN 978 1 5011 8042 2 a b J Stanley Lemons 2002 Rhode Island and the Slave Trade PDF Rhode Island History 60 4 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 a b c Slavery Roger Williams Initiative www findingrogerwilliams com Retrieved April 20 2021 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press p 28 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 Williams Roger May 15 1637 Letter to Sir Henry Vane and John Winthrop from Roger Williams May 15 1637 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 5 2021 Williams Roger June 21 1637 Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams June 21 2021 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 5 2021 Williams Roger July 15 1637 Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams July 15 1637 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 5 2021 Williams Roger July 31 1637 Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams July 31 1637 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 5 2021 Williams Roger February 28 1638 Letter to John Winthrop from Roger Williams February 28 1638 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 5 2021 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 a b c Gallay Alan January 1 2009 Indian Slavery in Colonial America U of Nebraska Press pp 40 42 ISBN 978 0 8032 2200 7 Williams Roger July 10 1637 Letter to John Winthrop From Roger Williams July 10 1637 2 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 3 2021 a b Williams Roger August 12 1637 Letter to John Winthrop From Roger Williams August 12 1637 Massachusetts Historical Society Retrieved August 3 2021 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 a b Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press p 104 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 PBS Africans in America the Terrible Transformation From Indentured Servitude to Racial Slavery Accessed September 13 2011 McLoughlin William G Rhode Island A History W W Norton 1978 p 26 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press p 151 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 Clark Pujara Christy 2018 Dark Work The Business of Slavery in Rhode Island New York University Press p 32 ISBN 978 1 4798 5563 6 Project MUSE book 49199 Newell Margret Ellen 2015 Brethren by Nature New England Indians Colonists and the Origins of American Slavery Ithaca New York Cornell University Press pp 170 171 ISBN 978 0 8014 5648 0 Newport Notables Redwood Library Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Clifton E Olmstead 1960 History of Religion in the United States Englewood Cliffs N J p 106 Mandell Daniel R September 1 2010 King Philip s War Colonial Expansion Native Resistance and the End of Indian Sovereignty JHU Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 8018 9948 5 Roger Williams Biography www rogerwilliams org Retrieved July 12 2023 a b Today in History February 5 Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved July 12 2023 Bryant Sparkle October 19 2015 The Tree Root That Ate Roger Williams NPS News Releases National Park Service Archived from the original on April 8 2018 Retrieved January 27 2018 Rhode Island Historical Society Body Body Who s Got the Body Where in the World IS Roger Williams New and Notes Spring Winter 2008 pg 4 Hall 1998 Separating Church and State Roger Williams and Religious Liberty University of Illinois Press p 77 Barry John M January 2012 God Government and Roger Williams Big Idea Smithsonian Archived from the original on December 15 2017 Retrieved December 15 2017 Everson and the Wall of Separation Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Pew Research Center May 14 2009 Archived from the original on December 14 2017 Retrieved December 13 2017 Lemons Stanley Roger Williams Champion of Religious Liberty Providence RI City Archives Archived from the original on 29 May 2014 Retrieved 28 May 2014 Chana B Cox 2006 Liberty God s Gift to Humanity Lexington Books p 26 ISBN 9780739114421 Archived from the original on February 27 2017 Retrieved October 13 2016 James Emanuel Ernst Roger Williams New England Firebrand Macmillan Co Rhode Island 1932 pg 246 1 Archived 4 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Publications of the Narragansett Club vol ii Mason Brown Lucas July 11 2012 Cracking the Code Infant Baptism and Roger Williams JCB Books Speak Archived from the original on June 18 2013 Retrieved September 16 2012 Fischer Suzanne April 9 2012 Personal Tech for the 17th Century The Atlantic Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 McKinney Michael March 2012 Reading Outside the Lines PDF The Providence Journal Archived PDF from the original on July 10 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 Mason Brown Lucas July 11 2012 Cracking the Code Infant Baptism and Roger Williams JCB Books Speak Brown University Archived from the original on June 18 2013 Retrieved September 16 2012 a b c d Roger Williams s Landing Place Monument Quahog dot org Archived from the original on May 26 2021 Retrieved December 23 2021 a b c Slate Rock Park Sowams Heritage Area January 14 2019 Archived from the original on May 8 2021 Retrieved December 23 2021 a b Shamgochian John August 3 2020 Slate Rock The Landing Place of Roger Williams Rhode Island Historical Society Archived from the original on December 23 2021 Retrieved December 23 2021 Further reading editBarry John Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul New York Viking Press 2012 ISBN missing Bejan Teresa Mere Civility Disagreement and the Limits of Toleration Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2017 Addresses Roger Williams ideas in dialogue with Hobbes and Locke and suggests lessons from Williams for how to disagree well in the modern public sphere ISBN missing Brockunier Samuel The Irrepressible Democrat Roger Williams 1940 popular biography ISBN missing Burrage Henry S Why Was Roger Williams Banished American Journal of Theology 5 January 1901 1 17 Byrd James P Jr The Challenges of Roger Williams Religious Liberty Violent Persecution and the Bible 2002 286 pp Davis Jack L Roger Williams among the Narragansett Indians New England Quarterly Vol 43 No 4 Dec 1970 pp 593 604 in JSTOR Davis James Calvin The Moral Theology of Roger Williams Christian Conviction and Public Ethics London Westminster John Knox 2004 Elton Romeo Life of Roger Williams the earliest Legislator and true Champion for a Full and Absolute Liberty of Conscience G P Putnam Field Jonathan Beecher A Key for the Gate Roger Williams Parliament and Providence New England Quarterly 2007 80 3 353 382 Fisher Linford D and J Stanley Lemons and Lucas Mason Brown Decoding Roger Williams The Lost Essay of Rhode Island s Founding Father Waco TX Baylor University Press 2014 Gammell William Life of Roger Williams the Founder of the State of Rhode Island Gould and Lincoln 1854 Goodman Nan Banishment Jurisdiction and Identity in Seventeenth Century New England The Case of Roger Williams Early American Studies An Interdisciplinary Journal Spring 2009 Vol 7 Issue 1 pp 109 139 Gaustad Edwin S Roger Williams Oxford University Press 2005 140 pp short scholarly biography stressing religion Gaustad Edwin S Roger Williams Prophet of Liberty Oxford University Press 2001 Gaustad Edwin S Liberty of Conscience Roger Williams in America Judson Press Valley Forge 1999 Gray Nicole Aurality in Print Revisiting Roger Williams s A Key into the Language of America Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 131 2016 64 83 Hall Timothy L Separating Church and State Roger Williams and Religious Liberty 1998 206 pp Johnson Alan E The First American Founder Roger Williams and Freedom of Conscience Pittsburgh PA Philosophia Publications 2015 In depth discussion of Roger Williams s life and work and his influence on the US Founders and later American history ISBN missing Knowles James D Memoir of Roger Williams the Founder of the State of Rhode Island Lln Edmands and Co 1834 Miller Perry Roger Williams A Contribution to the American Tradition 1953 much debated study Miller argues that Williams thought was primarily religious not political as so many of the historians of the 1930s and 1940s had argued ISBN missing Morgan Edmund S Roger Williams the church and the state 1967 170 pages short biography by leading scholar Mudge Z A Foot Prints of Roger Williams A Biography with sketches of important events in early New England History with which he was connected Carlton amp Lanahan 1871 Neff Jimmy D Roger Williams Pious Puritan and Strict Separationist Journal of Church and State 1996 38 3 529 546 in EBSCO Phillips Stephen Roger Williams and the Two Tables of the Law Journal of Church and State 1996 38 3 547 568 in EBSCO Rowley Matthew All Pretend an Holy War Radical Beliefs and the Rejection of Persecution in the Mind of Roger Williams The Review of Faith amp International Affairs 15 2 2017 66 76 Skaggs Donald Roger Williams Dream for America 1993 240 pp Stanley Alison To Speak With Other Tongues Linguistics Colonialism and Identity in 17th Century New England Comparative American Studies March 2009 Vol 7 Issue 1 p 1 17 pp Winslow Ola Elizabeth Master Roger Williams A Biography 1957 standard biography Wood Timothy L Kingdom Expectations The Native American in the Puritan Missiology of John Winthrop and Roger Williams Fides et Historia 2000 32 1 39 49Historiography edit Carlino Anthony O Roger Williams and his Place in History The Background and the Last Quarter Century Rhode Island History 2000 58 2 34 71 historiography Irwin Raymond D A Man for all Eras The Changing Historical Image of Roger Williams 1630 1993 Fides Et Historia 1994 26 3 6 23 historiography Morgan Edmund S Miller s Williams New England Quarterly Vol 38 No 4 Dec 1965 pp 513 523 in JSTOR Moore Leroy Jr Roger Williams and the Historians Church History 1963 32 4 432 451 in JSTOR Peace Nancy E Roger Williams A Historiographical Essay Rhode Island History 1976 35 4 103 113 Primary sources edit Williams Roger The Complete Writings of Roger Williams 7 vols 1963 Williams Roger The Correspondence of Roger Williams 2 vols ed by Glenn W LaFantasie 1988Fiction edit Settle Mary Lee I Roger Williams A Novel W W Norton amp Company Reprint edition 2002 George James W The Prophet and the Witch A Novel of Puritan New England Amazon Digital Services 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Williams Roger Literature by and about Roger Williams in the German National Library catalogue Works by Roger Williams at Project Gutenberg Roger Williams Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Works by or about Roger Williams at Internet Archive Side of the US American Roger Williams circle of friends Documentary about Roger Williams life Roger Williams Freedom s Forgotten Hero Part 1 to 7 Lecture by Martha Nussbaum Equal Liberty of Conscience Roger Williams and the Roots of a Constitutional Tradition Roger Williams Hireling Ministry None of Christ s Chronological list of Rhode Island leaders Archived 2 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine A Key into the Language of America digitization of a first edition copy held at the John Carter Brown Library Portals nbsp Calvinism nbsp Christianity nbsp Rhode Island nbsp New England nbsp United States nbsp Biography nbsp British Empire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roger Williams amp oldid 1206041753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.