Colonial Rhode Island was predominately Quaker, Presbyterian, Puritan, and Catholic. Since, its neighboring state, Massachusetts, was predominately Puritan, and very strict (Fundamentalistic). Therefore, many who settled Rhode Island were outcasts from other Christian denominations originally based in Massachesetts, and thus the disparate religious population of Rhode Island during the Colonial Period.
Since most of the colonists came here for freedom of religion, you can know that ver few to none were Catholics. They were not Puritans, though, either. If I remember my history correctly they were a mixture of Quaker and other protestant. My own ancestor, Rev. Thomas Dungan who came here in the mid 1600s brought the first Baptist church to the area.
The Massachusetts colony founded by the Pilgrims, was soon followed by fellow Protestants rebelling from the Anglican Church of England called the Puritans. Pilgrims desired to reform the Anglican Church from within while these Puritans wanted to leave the Church in its entirety. These two opposing views forced a Puritan leader, Roger Williams, to become unwanted so he went south to the Narragansett Bay region and established his colony that would become known as Rhode Island, in AD 1686. They were Puritans.
Roger Williams was exiled from Massachusetts because he believed in "freedom of conscience" and tolerance for all religions. He founded Providence, the first settlement in Rhode Island, as a safe haven for all religions. Most people in Rhode Island were Protestants, but unlike many other colonies they tolerated all forms of Protestants, and Catholics and Jews were allowed to settle there too and live in peace.
Rhode Island was about the only colony without an official religion, so practice was left to the individual conscience.
Roger Williams got banned from Massachusetts Bay Colony because of his religious beliefs so when he landed in Rhode Island, he declared his colony for freedom of religion. So, Rhode Island's religion in the 1600's was freedom, any religion that you wanted.
In Colonial Times, you did not have to be part of religion. The Rhode Island Colony was established for freedom of worshiping.
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Rhode Island was about the only colony without an official religion, so practice was left to the individual conscience.
Roger Williams got banned from Massachusetts Bay Colony because of his religious beliefs so when he landed in Rhode Island, he declared his colony for freedom of religion. So, Rhode Island's religion in the 1600's was freedom, any religion that you wanted.
Rhode Island was religion free.
Colonial Rhode Island was predominately Quaker, Presbyterian, Puritan, and Catholic. Since, its neighboring state, Massachusetts, was predominately Puritan, and very strict (Fundamentalistic). Therefore, many who settled Rhode Island were outcasts from other Christian denominations originally based in Massachesetts, and thus the disparate religious population of Rhode Island during the Colonial Period.
Colonial Rhode Island was predominately Quaker, Presbyterian, Puritan, and Catholic. Since, its neighboring state, Massachusetts, was predominately Puritan, and very strict (Fundamentalistic). Therefore, many who settled Rhode Island were outcasts from other Christian denominations originally based in Massachesetts, and thus the disparate religious population of Rhode Island during the Colonial Period.
In Colonial Times, you did not have to be part of religion. The Rhode Island Colony was established for freedom of worshiping.
No there wasn't slavery in Rhode Island. Rhode Island was started as a colony for unconventional people in the colonies.
one of the major things that set rhode island apart from other colonies was the idea of religious toleration. they allowed nearly every religion to practice freely
They tought them how to survive in the Rhode Island area.
In colonial Rhode Island, the most popular religion was Christianity, with a significant presence of various Protestant denominations. The colony was founded on principles of religious freedom, attracting followers of Baptist, Quaker, and other non-conformist faiths. Rhode Island's commitment to religious tolerance made it a diverse and accepting environment for different beliefs to flourish.