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Pursuit of Religious Freedom Film
Click to watch the full film "George Washington and the Pursuit of Religious Freedom."
George Washington went past mere religious toleration and established religious freedom for citizens.
He reassured people that the federal government would not prevent citizens from practicing the religion of their choice, or any at all.
Before the age of revolution, religious wars plagued Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa for centuries. Governments were tied to a state-supported religion, and those who did not follow it were persecuted. In some cases, Protestants killed Catholics and in others, Catholics killed Protestants. Jews were expelled from a number of countries. While persecution varied by time and location, it was often merciless. Thousands upon thousands were killed. People of persecuted faiths often had to practice in secret or flee.1
As John Winthrop put it, America became a religious “refuge”.2 Wave after wave of religious groups sought sanctuary in North America. In 1620, a group of Puritans arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts. Roman Catholics founded Maryland in 1634, and twenty years later Jews arrived in New York City.3 However, many did not find the peace they had hoped and prayed for.
At first, these communities in colonial North America looked very similar to the religious states of the Old World.4 Each religious settlement was founded around the community’s beliefs. Laws were established and expectations set based upon religious ideals. Puritans in New England based laws on the Bible, and only full church members were permitted to vote. Magistrates, considered “public ministers of God,” were expected to use the state to uphold the church’s agenda.5
Catholicism thrived in Maryland in the 1630s, but by the 1640s, Protestants took control and deported many Catholics. By 1649, however, Catholics controlled the Maryland Assembly. A Toleration Act—one of the very first of its kind—passed, which allowed both religions, but in 1654, the Protestants regained control. They repealed the act and outlawed the Roman Catholic religion.6
Tensions were not just between Protestants and Catholics. Discrimination occurred throughout the colonies. The Quakers were expelled from Massachusetts.7 Presbyterians and Baptists were banished from New England.8 In Virginia, Puritans and Quakers were barred.9 However, during the Great Awakening in the 1740s, there was a growing tolerance of minority religions in some regions of the colonies.
After the Revolutionary War, many played a role in shaping the new government to ensure all religions had the right to practice, including Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and John Adams. However, it was under the leadership of George Washington that freedom of religion was established, writing while president:
Being no bigot myself to any mode of worship, I am disposed to indulge the professors of Christianity in the church, that road to Heaven, which to them shall seem the most direct plainest easiest and least liable to exception.10
1. James H. Hutson, Religion and the Founding of the American Republic, (Library of Congress: Washington, DC, 1998), 2.
2. Hutson, 3.
3. Hutson, xiv.
4. Hutson, 7.
5. Hutson, 7.
6. Hutson, 15.
7. Hutson, xiv.
8. Hutson, 7.
9. Hutson, 18.
10. GW to the Marquis de Lafayette, August 15, 1787, GW Writings, 29:259.
11. Mary Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence”: Religion in the Life of George Washington, (University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville, 2008), xiii.
12. GW to Sir Edward Newenham, October 20, 1792, GW Writings, 32:190.
13. Mary Thompson, “Islam at Mount Vernon,” George Washington’s Mount Vernon, http://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/islam-at-mount-vernon/.
14. Seth Kaller, “George Washington’s Rare Anti-Catholic Test Oath,” Seth Kaller, Inc Historical Documents and Legacy Collections, https://www.sethkaller.com/item/1366-23200-George-Washington%E2%80%99s-Rare-Anti-Catholic-Test-Oath,-Taken-before-being-Appointed-Colonel-and-Commander-in-Chief-of-all-Virginia-Forces.
15. GW, general orders, July 9, 1776, GW Papers, Revolutionary War Series, 5:245-247.
16. Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence,” 82.
17. Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence,” 148 and GW, general orders, July 4, 1775, GW Writings, 3:309.
18. Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence,” 180.
19. Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence,” 82.
20. GW to Tench Tilghman, March 24, 1784, GW Writings, 27:367.
21. Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence,” 81.
22. Hutson, 65 and Rockingham County, petition, December 1, 1784, to Virginia General Assembly.
23. Constitution of the United States of America, Article VI Debts, Supremacy, Oaths, Religious Tests, https://constitutioncenter.org/interactive-constitution/articles/article-vi.
24. Thompson, “In the Hands of a Good Providence,” 158 and Worlds Almanac and Book of Facts, 1995, 459.
25. GW to the Society of Quakers, October 1789, GW Papers, Presidential Series, 4:265-269.
26. GW to The United Baptist Churches of Virginia, May 1789, GW Papers, Presidential Series, 2:423-425.
27. GW to George Mason, October 3, 1785, GW Papers, Confederation Series, 3:292-293.
28. GW to the Hebrew congregations of Philadelphia, New York, Charleston, and Richmond, December 1790, GW Writings, 31:185.
29. GW to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790, GW Papers, Presidential Series, 6:284-286.
30. Bill of Rights, National Archives and Records Administration https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/bill-of-rights-transcript#toc-amendment-i.
31. GW, Farewell Address, September 9, 1796, GW Writings, 25:229-30.