The Post Office at Portsmouth,
(Portsmouth Township, Newport County)
was established on July 1, 1808. The first Postmaster was Thomas Cory, Jr. This
Post Office is currently in operation under Postmaster Bruce K. Whitehead
appointed on December 29, 1990.
Pawtucket was founded in 1638 by Ann
Hutchinson.
Anne Hutchinson
Marbury was born either in 1590 or 1591 (She was baptized July 20, 1591
in Alford, Lincolnshire, England. Ann was a religious liberal who became one of
the co-founders of Rhode Island after her banishment from the Massachusetts Bay
Colony.
Ann was the daughter of a
Deacon in Christ's Church, Cambridge, England. She married William Hutchinson,
a merchant, in 1612 and they moved to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634. Ann
was an outspoken and deeply religious person who organized her own weekly
meetings of the women in the colony to discuss recent sermons and to express
her own theological views. She stressed the individual's intuition as a means
of reaching God and salvation, rather than the observance of institutionalized
beliefs. Her detractors accused her of
antinomianism--the view that God's grace
has freed the Christian from the need to observe established moral precepts.
Ann was highly critical of
the Massachusetts Puritans for what she considered to be their narrowly
legalistic concept of morality. A leading preacher of the colony, John
Winthrop, was violently opposed to Ann's views and was active in her
prosecution after he became governor. Ann was tried by the Massachusetts
General Court for "traducing the ministers,"
convicted in 1637 and sentenced to banishment from the colony. Ann was
imprisoned at the house of Joseph Weld, Marshall of Roxbury from 1637 to 1638
in an attempt to get her to recant her beliefs. When Ann refused to denounce
her beliefs she was tried by the Boston Church Council and formally
excommunicated.
In 1638 Ann and several of
her followers were taken to the Massachusetts/Rhode Island border and banished.
Ann and her followers established a colony on the island of Aquidneck in what
is now Portsmouth, RI. (This was a common
practice of the times in the Bay Colony for anyone who didn't conform to the
colony's rules. Colonists of the Quaker belief were frequently banished in this
way. The usual practice was to sentence them to be flogged in the various towns
of the colony before banishment.)
After the death of her husband
in 1642, Ann moved to Pelham Bay on the Long Island Sound where she and all of
her children with the exception of two still living in Rhode Island were
massacred by Indians in 1643.
Although Ann Hutchinson was
banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony as a religious dissenter the real
reason for her persecution may have been that she challenged the traditional
role of male superiority in Puritan society by expressing her own religious
convictions. Ann Hutchinson should be considered as one of the first crusaders
in the struggle for Women's
Equal Rights.
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Portsmouth Post Office |
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