Rhode Island

Mike Anthony's son-in-law attended St. George's School

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Rhode Island earned its reputation as a foundational element of the United States through its pioneering commitment to religious liberty and fierce independence, which shaped core American principles.

In 1636, Roger Williams, banished from Massachusetts Bay Colony for advocating separation of church and state, founded Providence Plantations. He purchased land from the Narragansett people and established a settlement based on “liberty of conscience,” creating the first government in North America with an explicitly secular foundation—no enforced religion, no state church. The 1663 royal charter formalized this as a “livelie experiment” in religious freedom, welcoming dissenters, Baptists, Quakers, Jews, and others. This model directly influenced the First Amendment’s protections for religious liberty and the broader ideal of separating church and state.

During the lead-up to independence, Rhode Island acted as a radical spark. It was the first colony to call for a Continental Congress (1774), the first to renounce allegiance to King George III (May 4, 1776—two months before the Declaration of Independence), and the site of the Gaspee Affair (1772), an early armed resistance against British authority that predated the Boston Tea Party. The colony raised the first colonial navy and suffered British occupation of Newport, yet contributed leaders like General Nathanael Greene, a key strategist in the Southern campaign leading to Yorktown.

After the Revolution, Rhode Island’s skepticism of strong central power led it to boycott the 1787 Constitutional Convention and delay ratification until May 29, 1790—the last of the 13 states. It only joined under threat of economic isolation, while insisting on a Bill of Rights. This stance reinforced the importance of limited government and individual rights in the new republic.

Though small, Rhode Island’s “rogue” spirit—dissent, tolerance, and resistance to tyranny—helped embed foundational American values of freedom and self-governance into the nation’s DNA. Alas, its experiment in pluralism has long since been challenged by unchecked illegal immigration from nations with fragile or failed governments; thereby de-stabilizing American cultural traditions.

 

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