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  1. May 18, 2018 · Charters Rhode Island. By 1643 Williams's colony had grown to four settlements—Providence, Portsmouth, Warwick, and Newport—on Narragansett Bay. In 1644 Williams made a trip to England and secured a charter for a self-governing colony called Rhode Island, a name he chose because Aquidneck Island reminded him of the Greek island of Rhodes.

  2. Rhode Island’s Royal Charter. The Royal Charter of 1663 was a document granted by King Charles II of England to the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. It allowed settlers in Rhode Island to govern their own colony and guaranteed their individual freedom of religion. It was the first charter to offer this degree of freedom to a ...

  3. Williams was banished from the colony of Massachusetts for his dissident beliefs and in 1643 founded the religiously tolerant colony of Rhode Island. Rhode Island was “a shelter for persons distressed of conscience.” This experimental colony supported freedom of belief and greater separation of church and government.

  4. Rhode Island's founders didn't agree with the puritan religion, affecting us to be the complete opposite of a puritan colony. The religion of the Puritans in Massachusetts was strict and austere leading to disagreements with many church members. Both Anne Hutchinson and Roger Williams had problems and intense conflicts with this religion.

  5. Apr 12, 2021 · Massachusetts Bay Colony inspired the colonization of modern-day Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire by exiling dissenters but, between 1659-1661, hanged Quakers (known as the Boston Martyrs) for spreading disruptive beliefs. People in the Middle Colonies who objected to the religious diversity often migrated to the Southern Colonies ...

  6. Sep 22, 2022 · Rhode Island in the American Revolution. 1763–1783. Rhode Island Colony was one of the 13 Colonies that declared independence from Great Britain in 1776. The colony played an important role in the events that took place during the American Revolution, from 1763 to 1783. Stephen Hopkins was a prominent leader of Rhode Island during the ...

  7. Newport, Rhode Island was founded in 1639 by religious dissidents who believed in the principle of soul liberty: the right of each person to their own religious beliefs and openly practice them. This sense of tolerance was more inclusive than was common anywhere else at the time and was codified in Rhode Island’s royal charter of 1662.

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