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History of Newport, Rhode Island
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Since its founding by English
settlers in 1639, Newport has bustled with diversity. The policy
of liberty of conscience and religion embodied in the Newport
Town Statutes of 1641 was a result of the religious beliefs of
its founders and their frustration over political intervention
in their religious life in Boston. This policy was a beacon to
settlers with wide-ranging religious beliefs, who came primarily
from other colonies at first, and co-existed in the rapidly growing
settlement, unaware that their towns religious diversity
was a prototype of the America to come. |
The first
English settlers arrived on Aquidneck Island in 1636 following
a remarkable woman named Anne Hutchinson. She had been driven
out of Boston for her religious beliefs which challenged the
very foundations of Puritanism. She and her band of supporters
followed the path taken by Roger Williams when he, too, was
banished from Massachusetts for religious reasons. After consulting
with Williams, her group purchased Aquidneck Island (later
named Rhode Island) from the native Americans.
What the English settlers found on their
arrival was hardly an empty wilderness. Native people had
been in the area for at least 5,000 years, and had established
sophisticated land management and fishing practices. Current
evidence points to the existence of a large summer settlement
in what is now downtown Newport, and the work these native
people had done clearing the land was one of the factors
that made this area attractive to English settlers.
Ann Hutchinsons group settled at the
northern end of the island in an area known as Pocasett. In
just over a year, however, that settlement split in two. A
group lead by William Coddington and Nicholas Easton moved
south to form Newport in 1639.
By the time they arrived in Newport, these
many of these settlerss were becoming Baptists and embraced
a belief that was central for the Baptists of Europe at the
time
the separation of church and state. These early settlers
founded their new town on the basis of liberty of conscience
and religion and Newport became one of the first secular democracies
in the Atlantic world. The founders commitment to religious
freedom had a profound impact on all aspects of the towns
subsequent history. |
Among the religious groups
attracted to this haven in a world of threatening intolerance
were Quakers and Jews. Together they transformed the town from
a small agricultural outpost to one of colonial Americas
five leading seaports. The Jews came in the 1650s their real
contribution to the cultural and economic life came in the
1750s. The Quakers also came to Newport in the late 1650s.
The Society of Friends flourished and grew, and, by 1700, over
half of Newports population were members of the Society
of Friends. |
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The Quakers
became the most influential of Newport's numerous early congregations
and they dominated the political, social and economic life
of the town into the 18th century, and their "plain style" of
living was reflected in Newport's architecture, decorative
arts and early landscape.
The Quakers neighborhood on Eastons
Point was home to some of the most highly skilled craftsman
in colonial America. Among the best known of these were the
Townsend and Goddard families, who made extraordinarily fine
and beautiful furniture. |
During the
17th century the cornerstones of Newports
architectural heritage were laid. The buildings that survive
from that period - the Old Stone Mill, the Wanton-Lyman-Hazard
House, and the White Horse Tavern - are part of Newports
rich, architectural tapestry that today also includes the great "cottages" along
Bellevue Avenue.
Trade and the export of rum, candles, fish,
furniture, silver, and other value-added goods were the main
engines of economic growth during the 18th century,
activities inexorably linked to Newports participation
in the slave trade and widespread ownership of slaves by
families throughout the city.
During this time the waterfront bustled with
activity with over 150 separate wharves and hundreds of shops
crowded along the harbor between Long Wharf and the southern
end of the harbor. As Newports trade throughout the Atlantic
basin grew, the city became an epicenter in the development
of modern American capitalism.
By the 1760s Newport had emerged as one of
the five leading ports in colonial North America, along with
Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston. The economic
growth spurred a building boom which included hundreds of houses
and many of the internationally important landmarks that survive
today, such as Trinity Church, the Colony House, Redwood Library,
and the Brick Market (now home to the Museum of Newport History). |
Newport helped
lead the way toward the Revolution and independence. Because
the city was such a well-known hot-bed of revolutionary fervor,
and because of its long history of disdain for royal and parliamentary
efforts to control its trade, the British occupied Newport
from 1776 to 1779, and over half of the towns population
fled. The British remained in Newport despite efforts to drive
them out by patriot forces in partnership with the French for
the first time in the Revolution. Eventually the British did
withdraw and the French, under the leadership of Admiral deTiernay
and General Rochambeau, began a sojourn in Newport that lasted
until 1783 until they left Newport on their historic march
to Yorktown to assist in the decisive victory there.
The British occupation had done irreparable
damage to Newports economy. Faced with a bleak future,
Newport in the early 19th century was forced to re-invent
itself. Newport had been bypassed by industrialization and
its landscape became frozen in time. Ironically, this became
an asset for the town as it transformed itself into a summer
resort and used its picturesque qualities to advantage in
attracting summer visitors. In the antebellum period, Newport
became a center for an influential group of artists, writers,
scientists, educators, architects, theologians, architects,
and landscape designers. These men and women reshaped the
cultural underpinnings of American life, and included Henry
and William James, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Julia Ward
Howe, William Ellery Channing, William Barton Rogers (the
founder of M.I.T.), Alexander Agassiz, and many more. |
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Later summer
colonists during the Gilded Age included elite familes from
South Carolina, the King and Griswold families of New York,
and later the Vanderbilts. These families and many more whose
presence here helped transform Newport into the Queen of the
Resorts, built the mansions for which Newport has become famous,
employing architects Richard Morris Hunt, McKim Mead and White,
Peabody and Stearns, and others. Several of these mansions
have become major tourist attractions.
Newports history has always been
tied to the sea. During the colonial period the citys
harbor teemed with trading ships. With the arrival of the
Summer Colony and the New York Yacht Club, Newport was on
its way to becoming a yachting capital. The Yacht Club brought
the famed Americas Cup to Newport in the 1930s where
it stayed until lost to the Australians in 1983. The fishing
industry is still a vital part of Newport's economy, as is
the United States Navy, which has been in Newport since the
1860s. Its major components were Naval War College and the
Torpedo Station (now Naval Undersea Warfare Center) both
of which were founded immediately after the Civil War. The
Navy presence on Aquidneck Island grew and eventually included
the Naval Education Training Center and the North Atlantic
Destroyer Squadron which had its home port at the Newport
Naval base until the 1970s. Despite the loss of the fleet,
the Navy is still the largest employer in the area, bringing
many industry and service businesses to the area as well.
In the late 19th and 20th centuries various
groups such as the Irish, Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, Filipinos,
Cambodians, and Hispanics joined groups such as Jews, African
Americans, and Native Americans who had been in Newport for
some time, enriching the ethnic diversity of the town. African
Americans from Virginia and other areas moved to Newport and
joined a thriving community that continues to be a vital part
of Newports history. The Irish came to Newport in the
1820s, drawn here by the work available to them at Fort Adams.
Despite laws from 1719 that discriminated against Catholics
by denying them the right to become "freemen", Catholics
who immigrated to Aquidneck Island found a relatively tolerant
haven from the virulent anti-Catholic and Irish sentiments
in Boston and other towns at the time. Many of the Irish families
who made Newport home during the early 19th century
still live and prosper in Newport, maintaining close links
with the land of their ancestors. |
After World
War II, one of the most successful historic preservation movements
in the country saved hundreds of structures throughout Newport
County. That effort began in the 1840s when George Champlin
Mason, writer and editor of the Newport Mercury (a weekly
newspaper still published today by the Newport Daily News)
fought to save Trinity Church. He helped found the Newport
Historical Society, which preserved the Seventh Day Baptist
Meeting House in 1884, and later acquired and restored the
Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House, and the Great Friends Meeting House.
Other groups who have taken the preservation movement to heroic
levels include the Preservation Society of Newport County,
the Newport Restoration Foundation, and several grassroots
organizations such as Operation Clapboard.
With the success of the preservation movement,
Newport began to recover from the economic downturn that
came when the destroyer fleet was pulled out of Newport.
The Navy continued to lead the way, but a new kind of tourism
- now refered to as "Heritage Tourism"- began to
develop slowly. Visitors to Newport now come to learn about
the areas remarkable history as well as to enjoy the
beauty and the hospitality of the City by the Sea. There
is, of course, more than mansions for visitors to see in
Newport. There are beautifully restored colonial landmarks
for visitors to explore along with, fine small museums, such
as the Museum of Newport History in the Brick Market which
is a perfect place to begin a visit to the area where visitors
can get an overview of the citys history. The Newport
Art Museum, the Tennis Hall of Fame, Fort Adams, Redwood
Library, Touro Synagogue, Trinity Church, and many other
attractions offer the visitors an unrivalled opportunity
to explore aspects of this countrys history. Music
festivals, such as the Jazz and Folk Festivals and the Newport
Music Festival are all major events drawing thousands to
Newport every summer.
The stereotype of Newport solely as a playground
for the wealthy during and after the Gilded Age is in contrast
with local reality. While Newport continues to be home to summer
visitors of dazzling wealth, and while some of them have made
Newport their year round home, most of the residents of the
City by the Sea continue to be middle and working class. Given
Newports image, it is ironic that the city also has the
largest number of low-income housing units in the state of
Rhode Island.
Newports history is remarkable in many
ways, but perhaps the most unique aspect is the fact that so
much of its history is still visible on the landscape in an
unparalleled concentration of preserved architecture. It continues
its commitment to liberty of conscience and religion and Newports
resilience and creativity in meeting the economic changes that
have overtaken it offers strong proof that diversity works
in keeping the city alive and vibrant.
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