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The Times and Trials of Anne Hutchinson: Puritans Divided (Landmark Law Cases and American Society)

par Michael P. Winship

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Anne Hutchinson was perhaps the most famous Englishwoman in colonial American history, viewed in later centuries as a crusader for religious liberty and a prototypical feminist. Michael Winship, author of the highly acclaimed Making Heretics, provides a startlingly new and fresh account of her oft-told tale, disentangling what really happened from the legends that have misrepresented her for so long. During the 1630s, religious controversies drove a wedge into the puritan communities of Massachusetts. Anne Hutchinson and other members began to speak out against mainstream doctrine, while ministers like John Cotton argued for personal discovery of salvation. The puritan fathers viewed these activities as a direct and dangerous threat to the status quo and engaged in a fierce and finally successful fight against them. Refusing to disavow her beliefs, Hutchinson was put on trial twice--first for slandering the colony's ministers, then for heresy--and banished from the colony. Combing archives for neglected manuscripts and ancient books for obscure references, Winship gives new voice to other characters in the drama whose significance has not previously been understood. Here are Thomas Shepard, a militant heresy hunter who vigorously pursued both Cotton and Hutchinson; Thomas Dudley, the most important leader in Massachusetts after Governor John Winthrop; Henry Vane, a well-connected supporter of radical theology; and John Wheelwright, a bellicose minister who was a lightning rod for the frustrations of other dissidents. Winship also analyzes the political struggle that almost destroyed the colony and places Hutchinson's trials within the context of this turmoil. As Winship shows, although the trials of Anne Hutchinson and her allies were used ostensibly to protect Massachusetts' Christian society, they instead nearly tore it apart. His concise, fast-moving, and up-to-date account brings puritan doctrine back into focus, giving us a much closer and more informed look at a society marked by religious intolerance and immoderation, one that still echoes in our own times. As long as governments take it upon themselves to define orthodoxies of conscience, The Times and Trials of Anne Hutchinson will be required reading for students and concerned citizens alike.… (plus d'informations)
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This is not a book for the faint-of-heart. It is a thorough and detailed account of what was going on in the Massachusetts Bay Colony before and during the so-called Antinomian Controversy and the trials of Rev. John Wheelwright (who was convicted of sedition and banished to New Hampshire) and then Anne Hutchinson. This history is sometimes thick with Puritan theology and its accompanying rhetoric, which admittedly, I did not completely digest. But one should not be put off by my admission of “indigestion” for there is still much to take from this book. Winship does a great job setting the stage. And I thought this tidbit fascinating:

A fight was all the more likely to break out in 1636 because the puritan migration to Massachusetts produced a quite unanticipated stimulus to confrontation: success. In England, puritans, with their self-righteousness and severe program of social and religious reform, had always been a deeply resented minority. The expected as much, for the ungodly would always hate the godly. …As a harassed, fighting minority, it was easy for puritans to maintain fervor. But in Massachusetts, they faced no persecution, no bishops, no large phalanx of wicked people….Instead, puritans had a glut of what they thought they had always wanted: sermons, prayers and no limits to godly companionship. …There was a dangerously tempting way to compensate for the lack of enemies in Massachusetts: create them.

He also mentions that it has been suggested that the Pequot War against the natives in Connecticut may have been just that. Certainly, as one continues in this tale, one does wonder if all the drama was also just a means of creating an enemy.

The Puritans usually kept their church and state matters separated; the church handled moral issues, the courts handled the civil issues. In this controversy it gets fairly messy. And human nature being what it is, one can’t help seeing a bit of what was to come in Salem, and so many other controversies throughout our history.

I won’t elaborate on the complex hearings and trials here, nor will I tell you about Anne Hutchinson, but I will say that Winship puts her in historical context and attempts to get past the intentionally “semi-fictionized” picture that John Winthrop left behind. This is a worthy read; there is a lot in this small book. And if you are interested in early New England history or if any—many, in my case—of the historical characters are your ancestors, so much the better.

And, really, the book deserves a better review than this. I'm sure the Eve LaPlante book is more digestible but I choose this one because it had the endorsement of Mary Beth Norton, an historian whose works I have read (she has, in my opinion, written the best book on the Salem Witchcraft Trials. ( )
  avaland | Aug 23, 2017 |
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Anne Hutchinson was perhaps the most famous Englishwoman in colonial American history, viewed in later centuries as a crusader for religious liberty and a prototypical feminist. Michael Winship, author of the highly acclaimed Making Heretics, provides a startlingly new and fresh account of her oft-told tale, disentangling what really happened from the legends that have misrepresented her for so long. During the 1630s, religious controversies drove a wedge into the puritan communities of Massachusetts. Anne Hutchinson and other members began to speak out against mainstream doctrine, while ministers like John Cotton argued for personal discovery of salvation. The puritan fathers viewed these activities as a direct and dangerous threat to the status quo and engaged in a fierce and finally successful fight against them. Refusing to disavow her beliefs, Hutchinson was put on trial twice--first for slandering the colony's ministers, then for heresy--and banished from the colony. Combing archives for neglected manuscripts and ancient books for obscure references, Winship gives new voice to other characters in the drama whose significance has not previously been understood. Here are Thomas Shepard, a militant heresy hunter who vigorously pursued both Cotton and Hutchinson; Thomas Dudley, the most important leader in Massachusetts after Governor John Winthrop; Henry Vane, a well-connected supporter of radical theology; and John Wheelwright, a bellicose minister who was a lightning rod for the frustrations of other dissidents. Winship also analyzes the political struggle that almost destroyed the colony and places Hutchinson's trials within the context of this turmoil. As Winship shows, although the trials of Anne Hutchinson and her allies were used ostensibly to protect Massachusetts' Christian society, they instead nearly tore it apart. His concise, fast-moving, and up-to-date account brings puritan doctrine back into focus, giving us a much closer and more informed look at a society marked by religious intolerance and immoderation, one that still echoes in our own times. As long as governments take it upon themselves to define orthodoxies of conscience, The Times and Trials of Anne Hutchinson will be required reading for students and concerned citizens alike.

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