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The
Bible Commonwealth
In
1647, Alice Young of Windsor became the first person executed for
witchcraft in Britain's North American Colonies. Picture
1, 2
As the pressures
on available land mounted, the "proprietors" in each town
(the original settlers or their descendants) fought to retain control
over undistributed town land and called upon the General Assembly
to uphold their traditional rights. Picture
3
In
the Great Awakening, a religious revival of the 1740's, impassioned
evangelical ministers like George Whitfield attracted crowds of
thousands. Convinced the colony had strayed dangerously from its
early religious principles, they cried out for a return to the strict
Puritanism of the 17th century. Whitfield's popularity threatened
traditional church leaders, and the General Assembly promptly banned
traveling preachers and even deported one. Picture
4, 5
Revolutionary
Voices
"Bare naked power is an
awful thing and very unamiable to a people that have been used to
be free."
Governor
William Pitkin, 1765
"No
one dares, and few in power are disposed, to punish any violences
that are offered to the Authority of the Act - in short, all the
springs of Government are broken and nothing but anarchy and confusion
appear in Prospect."
Jared
Ingersoll, Royal tax collector, 1766
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