American history


  MILITARY HISTORY
  IMPERIAL HISTORY
  DIPLOMATIC HISTORY
  ECONOMIC HISTORY
  INDUSTRIAL HISTORY
  RELIGIOUS HISTORY
  America as a Religious Refuge: The Seventeenth Century
  Religion in Eighteenth-Century America
  18th Century Churches
  Religion and the American Revolution
  American Anglicans
  Religion and the Congress of the Confederation
  Religion and state governments
  Religion and the federal government
  Religion and the New Republic
  SLAVERY
  HISTORY OF WOMEN
  GOLD RUSH
  TODAY IN HISTORY




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» National Museum of American History
24 Jan 07   by trsaso

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» See this.
19 Feb 06   by netdevil

RELIGIOUS HISTORY

The religious history of the United States is a complex narrative that begins more than a century before the former British colonies became the United States of America in 1776.

Many of the original settlers were men and women of deep religious convictions. That the religious intensity of the original settlers would diminish to some extent over time was perhaps to be expected, but new waves of eighteenth century immigrants brought their own religious fervor across the Atlantic and the nation's first major religious revival in the middle of the eighteenth century injected new vigor into American religion.

The result was that many of the people who rose in rebellion against Great Britain in 1776 cited reasons of a religious nature for their actions, and most American statesmen, when they began to form new governments at the state and national levels, shared a conviction that religion was, to quote Alexis de Tocqueville's observation, "indispensable to the maintenance of republican institutions".