With Thanksgiving comes thoughts of the pilgrims taking up
residence in the new world, landing
at Plymouth Rock in what is now the state of Massachusetts. The pious pilgrims certainly have a
reputation for being a rigid and humorless group. But there are a few surprises to be
found. Even though drunkenness was
discouraged, beer was accepted as a drink by men, women, and children. The daily ration on the Mayflower was a
gallon a day for each individual. Even
sex was not taboo under the right circumstances. They had a matter-of-fact attitude about sex
as long as it was between a married couple.
It's when sex strayed from being the exclusive right between a married
couple that the stories get interesting.
Studies by a group of anthropologists at the University of
Virginia found that the pilgrims spent a great deal of time thinking about how
to punish those with impure thoughts and actions. Studies also discovered that in 11% of the
marriages at Plymouth Colony the bride was already pregnant. The same study estimates that as many as 50%
of the pilgrims engaged in premarital sex.
Definitely not an image that fits the staid pilgrims.
But what about the actions and activities of those naughty
pilgrims? As with so much in life,
there's the façade and then there's the underlying reality.
Although not liberal in their thinking or lifestyle, the
pilgrims were not as uptight as history would have us believe. They tried to create a strict religious
society, but had an understanding and mercy unusual for their time in
history. As time passed, intolerance
grew and was reflected in their laws and clearly demonstrated by the notorious
Salem witch trials.
According to the Mayflower Compact, the colony was to
establish laws based on Biblical teachings "for the glory of God and the
advancement of the Christian faith."
The Old Testament book of Leviticus was the basis for most of their laws
(a biblical source that definitely predated Christianity rather than reflecting
it). Adultery? Death.
A man has sex with his daughter-in-law?
Death. Sodomy? Death.
Bestiality? Death. Are you beginning to see a pattern? :)
But interestingly, the pilgrims did not typically enforce
the death penalty for sex offenses.
There was only one case in which the convicted offender was actually put
to death for sex crimes. It was the case
of Thomas Graunger, a teenage boy apparently at the peak of his raging hormones
who sought satisfaction from any and all sources available to him…the farm
animals.
According to Plymouth Governor William Bradford, "He
was this year detected of buggery, and indicted for the same, with a mare, a
cow, two goats, five sheep, two calves and a turkey."
Even though Thomas was the only one executed for a sex
crime, punishments were routinely severe even with far lesser sex crimes and
usually meant whippings, being put into the stocks, and fines.
Men were not the only offenders in Plymouth colony. The prim women weren't always so pious
either. Women were often caught since
the evidence of their dalliances were babies.
The records of the times are filled with one out-of-wedlock child after
another. Babies showing up just a few
months after marriage were also evidence of wrong doing. Pre-marital sex was severely punished. Fines were levied even for making passes, for
appearing to have a lascivious carriage
in public, or partying in mixed company at an unseemly time of night.
Sex outside marriage, even between two unmarried consenting
adults, usually meant a whipping and fines.
If the woman became pregnant, the man had to either marry her or pay for
the child's upbringing. The man was
usually placed in the stocks and whipped while the woman was made to
watch. Sometimes mercy was granted as in
the case of a servant, Jane Powell.
Following years of hard servitude, she was destitute and had agreed to
having sex in the hopes of marrying the man.
Apparently the court found her plea convincing and she went unpunished.
Even though the pilgrims imposed strict punishment for
crimes, they also understood human temptations.
In 1656, Katheren Aines and William Paule were sentenced for committing
adultery. William was whipped and forced
to pay the costs of his imprisonment.
Katheren was whipped, imprisoned and forced to wear a letter on her
shoulder designating her as an adulteress.
(Calling Nathaniel Hawthorne!)
However, Katheren's husband, Alexander, was also punished. Alexander had left his family for some time
and treated her badly during their marriage.
The pilgrims viewed him as guilty of "exposing his wife to such
temptations." Alexander was
required to pay for his wife's imprisonment, and sit in the stocks while
William and Katheren were whipped.
6 comments:
So glad I didn't live in that time period, but am not sure we've reformed. Our punishments are now carried out via social and mass media, and the underlying call for sheep-like conformity remains the same. I'm happy to read that original thinkers existed and carried on in our country's early settlements! Happy Thanksgiving, Samantha!
Amazing, Samantha! Yes, I'm happy to not have lived during that period of time in America. :)
Ashantay: Yes, there's far too much of the "do as I say and I'll do your thinking for you" mentality. And it seems that social media is running wild, totally unchecked even by common sense. That seeming anonymity that allows people to do things they would never do if they didn't have that wall to hide behind.
Thanks for your comment.
Mary: Me, too. It's tough enough living now. :)
Thanks for your comment.
Loved this post, Samantha, really intriguing. Lots of information, good and bad, about the so-called Puritans and their propensity to be somewhat hypocritical. Fascinating.
Hebby: Glad you enjoyed it. Hypocritical seems to run through all societies from all the ages of history...apparently an integral part of human nature. :)
Thanks for your comment.
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