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AP U.S. History 1.6 Period 2: 1690-1754 254 Views
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AP U.S. History 1.6 Period 2: 1690-1754. In the New England colonies in the mid-to-late 17th century, the freedoms described in the excerpt above were generally...what?
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:04
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by a stinging sense of humor.
- 00:08
All right, give this excerpt a quick look.
- 00:10
[ mumbles ]
- 00:13
[ mumbling continues ] All right. Bill Penn.
Full Transcript
- 00:17
And the question:
- 00:18
In the New England colonies in the mid-to-late 17th century,
- 00:21
the freedoms described in the excerpt above were generally...
- 00:26
what?
- 00:27
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:31
Okay, let's start out by figuring out exactly what
- 00:34
kinds of freedoms William Penn was talking about here.
- 00:36
There's a bit about
- 00:37
"power in reverence with the people."
- 00:40
And also that people "may be free by their
- 00:43
just obedience."
- 00:45
Huh.
- 00:45
Which basically means that people should be able to
- 00:47
participate in their government and have a say
- 00:49
in how their lives are lived.
- 00:53
Well, no wonder they named a state after that guy.
- 00:55
Yeah, he's pretty good.
- 00:56
So we just need to figure out
- 00:58
who in the New England colonies actually had
- 01:00
access to those freedoms.
- 01:02
Were those rights A - extended to worshippers of all faiths?
- 01:06
Well, you'd like to think so, but even though British colonists
- 01:08
fled to America to escape religious persecution
- 01:11
in their home country,
- 01:12
they were pretty intolerant toward people who didn't agree with them.
- 01:15
That's right. If you didn't believe in Jesus Christ,
- 01:17
there was pretty good chance you could be executed. Hmm.
- 01:22
Talk about Philly fanatics.
- 01:24
Yeah. So that knocks out A. Thank you, Brits.
- 01:27
All right. Were those freedoms B - available only for
- 01:30
Quakers and Mennonites?
- 01:32
Well, there were a lot of Quakers and Mennonites
- 01:34
in the Pennsylvania colony, but remember,
- 01:36
this question is asking us about all of New England.
- 01:40
And the other colonists really didn't like the Quakers.
- 01:42
So much so that in 1660,
- 01:44
four Quakers were executed in Massachusetts for heresy.
- 01:48
So that eliminates B, as well.
- 01:49
So then were these freedoms C -
- 01:52
rejected by Catholics and Jews?
- 01:54
Hmm.
- 01:55
Well, that doesn't really make sense at all,
- 01:56
especially because those religious minorities
- 01:59
would want these kinds of freedoms in the first place.
- 02:01
So that's a no-go on C.
- 02:03
Which must mean these freedoms D -
- 02:05
were limited to Protestants
- 02:07
and small pockets of other Christian denominations.
- 02:10
And that makes sense, right?
- 02:12
All those Puritans that were escaping religious
- 02:14
persecution - they only wanted freedoms extended
- 02:17
to people who were just like them:
- 02:19
white, Anglo-Saxon, and Protestant.
- 02:23
Yeah. WASP.
- 02:25
So D is the right answer.
- 02:26
Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase,
- 02:29
"hive mentality."
- 02:30
[ trumpet ]
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