The Persecution of Quakers

Quakers Arrested in Salem

© Mary Trotter Kion

In and around Salem, Massachusetts the Quakers are harassed, beaten, deported, and sometimes even hanged for what they believe.

In June of 1658, a town meeting was held at the ship Tavern in Salem to discuss the latest Quaker problem. Recently, the town constables had raided the house of one Nicholas Phelps. There, they had interrupted a Quaker meeting in progress. The constables arrested nineteen of those attending the meeting and tossed them into jail to await trial the following week.

Quaker Threatens Parliament at Gun Point

In discussing the Quaker problem perhaps a particular incident in London, that supposedly involved a Quaker, was brought up. It seems that a Quaker had entered Parliament with a gun, saying that: "his inner light had commanded him to kill everyone there." In view of the Quakers' abhorrence to violence, one can not help but question whether the possibly deranged fellow was truly a Quaker. Perhaps those who were unsympathetic to the Quaker cause assumed that surely the dangerous fellow must have been a Quaker to have attempted such a fool stunt.

In Massachusetts the authorities verbally degraded the Quakers by insisting they had "free morals" and that any actually believing Quaker woman was nothing more than a "Quaking slut."

Quaker Deportees

The June 1658 incident of a secret Quaker meeting being held in or around Salem was not the first clash the Puritans had had with the Quakers in Massachusetts. Two years earlier, in 1656, a Captain George Corwin discovered two Quakers aboard his ship, the Swallow, that had at the time been anchored in Boston Harbor. The two Quaker "heretics" had been arrested at once, inspected for marks indicating that they were witches, and then sent back to the ship to await deportation.

The Quakers continues at:

Those Persistent Quakers.

Previous:

The Quakers .


The copyright of the article The Persecution of Quakers in American History is owned by Mary Trotter Kion. Permission to republish The Persecution of Quakers must be granted by the author in writing.




Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo