I dont know. But its Anne not Anna. :)
Yes. These included the Separatist minister Roger Williams in 1635 and Anne Hutchinson's followers in 1637.
Winthrop was governor four times, for a total of about 12 years. 1630-1634 1637-1640 1642-1644 1646-1649 (died in office)
The salary for bricklayers and masons in colonial Massachusetts was 33 1/3 cents per day in 1630. In New York Colony, a good bricklayer earned about 80 cents per day in 1637. From 1697 to 1711, experienced brickmakers earned 66 2/3 cents per day in Massachusetts.
Egypt
This was the battle between the Massachusetts bay and plymoth colonies with native American allies against the Pequot tribe in 1636-1637.
Anne Hutchinson traveled to Road Island and started a settlement of Portsmouth. By Sara P.
the word that goes in the blank is confront
Yes. These included the Separatist minister Roger Williams in 1635 and Anne Hutchinson's followers in 1637.
1637
John Wheelwright was banished generally in reaction to his "Antinomian" theology and specifically because of a sermon he preached in January of 1637 accusing many New England leaders of being under a "Covenant of Works" and not a "Covenant of Grace" and thus being "enemies of Christ", resulting in a judgment by the Court of guilty for the charges of sedition and contempt.
1637 in mass
Anne Hutchinson was born in England, the daughter of a clergyman. As such, she had certain religious beliefs. She came to America in 1734 with her family, following John Cotton, a persecuted religious leader in England. She settled in Massachusetts, a Puritan colony at the time. She had very different, more tolerant religious ideas, and she spoke her mind about them. She also held meetings in her home primarily attended by women. Because of this, she was severely breaking the gender norms of the day, when women were not really supposed to take such authority as she did. Governor Winthrop therefore hated her, excommunicated her from the Puritan church, and exiled Anne and her family from Massachusetts. They then settled in Rhode Island where they were killed by a local Native American tribe.
Here are some points to expand on in an essay: Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643) founded the Portsmouth colony in what would become the state of Rhode island. She arrived in America in 1634. But she and others had a fundamental disagreement with the theology being practiced by the Puritans in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and she was banished in 1637. She and her family moved west into the uncolonized regions. After her husband died in 1641, she moved into lands claimed by the Dutch (New Netherland, later New York). She died there in a 1643 Indian uprising. Four of her 11 children lived to adulthood and married. Her descendants include three US Presidents (FDR, George Bush, and George W. Bush).
Anne Hutchinson was a puritan dissenter who believed in the idea of individual interpretation of the Bible without the need for church hierarchy or ministers. She held meetings in her home to discuss sermons and religious teachings, which eventually led to her banishment from the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1637.
Sweden
Winthrop was governor four times, for a total of about 12 years. 1630-1634 1637-1640 1642-1644 1646-1649 (died in office)
The Puritan minister Thomas Hooker is known as the founder of Hartford, CT in 1637, along with Samuel Stone and former Massachusetts governor John Haynes, who became the first governor of the Connecticut Colony.