Anne Hutchinson
has long been seen as a strong religious dissenter who paved the way for religious freedom in the strictly Puritan environment of New England. Another interpretation of the controversy surrounding asserts that she was simply a loving wife and mother whose charisma and personal ideas were misconstrued to be a radical religious movement. Since this alleged religious movement was led by a woman, it was quickly dealt with by the Puritan fathers as a real threat. Whatever her motives, she was clearly a great leader in the cause of religious toleration in America and the advancement of women in society. Although is historically documented to have been banished as a religious dissenter, the ...
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continued to voice his radical opinions, including that many ministers were appointed haphazardly by high church officials to preach in any manner they wanted. Eventually, Anne's father did restrain his verbal attacks on the Church of England, choosing conformity with an imperfect church over constant arrests and inquisitions. (D. Crawford, Four Women in a Violent Time, pps. 11-15.) Being educated at home, Anne read many of her father's books on theology and religion. Much of Anne's later independence and willingness to speak out was due to her father's example. Anne admired her father for his defiance of traditional church principles. She was always fascinated with theological questions such as the fate of the Indians who had no knowledge of Jesus Christ or salvation. Her childhood was a definite factor in the development of the strong, self-assured woman she grew up to be.
lived in Alford, England as a housewife and mother after she was married at the age of twenty-one to a ...
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of Anne's youth in England, the official religion was Protestantism under the Church of England. Puritanism developed in the late Sixteenth Century from the split in Protestantism between those who were satisfied with traditional methods and those who thought the way of worship needed purification. This second group, the Puritans, thought that worship needed to be simpler with fewer sacraments and rites. The battle lines were drawn, and the Puritan Revolution in England began. In the twelve years before 1642, 21,000 Puritans moved to New England (B. Bailyn, The Peopling of British North America, pps. 25-26.) for the purpose of establishing a haven for them to practice Puritanism ...
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"Anne Hutchinson." Essayworld.com. Essayworld.com, 17 Nov. 2006. Web. 28 May. 2025. <http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Anne-Hutchinson/55728>
"Anne Hutchinson." Essayworld.com. November 17, 2006. Accessed May 28, 2025. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Anne-Hutchinson/55728.
"Anne Hutchinson." Essayworld.com. November 17, 2006. Accessed May 28, 2025. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Anne-Hutchinson/55728.
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