IMJerusha
New member
Puritans didn't, and they were intolerant prigs who detested the concept of "live free or die." Get your history straight.
I do beg your pardon, but I'm fairly certain I have my history straight.
1620 -- Plymouth was settled by "separating Puritans", those who wanted to retain their English identity yet worship God as they felt was true and correct. From thence the Puritan Great Migration from 1630-1640 began to escape the religious and political corruption in the Church of England. In 1639, a constitution was drafted by New England Puritans to affirm their faith in God and announce their intention to establish a Christian nation. Those Puritan fathers were the epitome of "live free or die". Frank Lambert, an author for the Princeton University Press, stated: "While the Puritan Fathers gave us the symbols of America as haven of religious freedom and America as a Christian Nation, the Founding Fathers provided enduring legacies that define the place and role of religion in American society." Seven of the descendants of these Puritans became Founding Fathers; delegates to the Constitutional Convention.