| The first English settlers
arrived on Aquidneck Island in 1636 following a
remarkable woman named Ann Hutchinson. She had
been driven out of Boston for her religious
beliefs which challenged the very foundations of
Puritanism. She and her band of supporters
followed the path taken by Roger Williams when
he, too, was banished from Massachusetts for
religious reasons. After consulting with
Williams, her group purchased Aquidneck Island
(later named Rhode Island) from the native
Americans. What the English settlers found on
their arrival was hardly an empty wilderness.
Native people had been in the area for at least
5,000 years, and had established sophisticated
land management and fishing practices. Current
evidence points to the existence of a large
summer settlement in what is now downtown
Newport, and the work these native people had
done clearing the land was one of the factors
that made this area attractive to English
settlers.
Ann Hutchinson's group settled at the
northern end of the island in an area known as
Pocasett. In just over a year, however, that
settlement split in two. A group lead by William
Coddington and Nicholas Easton moved south to
form Newport in 1639.
By the time they arrived in Newport, these
many of these settlers's were becoming
Baptists and embraced a belief that was central
for the Baptists of Europe at the time - the
separation of church and state. These early
settlers founded their new town on the basis of
liberty of conscience and religion and Newport
became one of the first secular democracies in
the Atlantic world. The founder's commitment
to religious freedom had a profound impact on all
aspects of the town's subsequent history.
Among the religious groups attracted to this
haven in a world of threatening intolerance were
Quakers and Jews. Together they transformed the
town from a small agricultural outpost to one of
colonial America's five leading seaports.
The Jews came in the 1650s their real
contribution to the cultural and economic life
came in the 1750s. The Quakers also came to
Newport in the late 1650s. The Society of Friends
flourished and grew, and, by 1700, over half of
Newport's population were members of the
Society of Friends. The Quakers became the most
influential of Newport's numerous early
congregations and they dominated the political,
social and economic life of the town into the
18th century, and their "plain style"
of living was reflected in Newport's
architecture, decorative arts and early
landscape.
The Quaker's neighborhood on Easton's
Point was home to some of the most highly skilled
craftsman in colonial America. Among the best
known of these were the Townsend and Goddard
families, who made extraordinarily fine and
beautiful furniture.
During the 17th century the
cornerstones of Newport's architectural
heritage were laid. The buildings that survive
from that period - the Old Stone Mill, the
Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House, and the White Horse
Tavern - are part of Newport's rich,
architectural tapestry that today also includes
the great "cottages" along Bellevue
Avenue.
Trade and the export of rum, candles, fish,
furniture, silver, and other value-added goods
were the main engines of economic growth during
the 18th century, activities
inexorably linked to Newport's participation
in the slave trade and widespread ownership of
slaves by families throughout the city.
During this time the waterfront bustled with
activity with over 150 separate wharves and
hundreds of shops crowded along the harbor
between Long Wharf and the southern end of the
harbor. As Newport's trade throughout the
Atlantic basin grew, the city became an epicenter
in the development of modern American capitalism.
By the 1760s Newport had emerged as one of the
five leading ports in colonial North America,
along with Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and
Charleston. The economic growth spurred a
building boom which included hundreds of houses
and many of the internationally important
landmarks that survive today, such as Trinity
Church, the Colony House, Redwood Library, and
the Brick Market (now home to the Museum of
Newport History).
Newport helped lead the way toward the
Revolution and independence. Because the city was
such a well-known hot-bed of revolutionary
fervor, and because of its long history of
disdain for royal and parliamentary efforts to
control its trade, the British occupied Newport
from 1776 to 1779, and over half of the town's
population fled. The British remained in Newport
despite efforts to drive them out by patriot
forces in partnership with the French for the
first time in the Revolution. Eventually the
British did withdraw and the French, under the
leadership of Admiral deTiernay and General
Rochambeau, began a sojourn in Newport that
lasted until 1783 until they left Newport on
their historic march to Yorktown to assist in the
decisive victory there.
The British occupation had done irreparable
damage to Newport's economy. Faced with a
bleak future, Newporters in the early 19th
century was forced to re-invent itself. Newport
had been bypassed by industrialization and its
landscape became frozen in time. Ironically, this
became an asset for the town as it transformed
itself into a summer resort and used its
picturesque qualities to advantage in attracting
summer visitors. In the antebellum period,
Newport became a center for an influential group
of artists, writers, scientists, educators,
architects, theologians, architects, and
landscape designers. These men and women reshaped
the cultural underpinnings of American life, and
included Henry and William James, Thomas
Wentworth Higginson, Julia Ward Howe, William
Ellery Channing, William Barton Rogers (the
founder of M.I.T.), Alexander Agassiz, and many
more.
Later summer colonists during the Gilded Age
included elite familes from South Carolina, the
King and Griswold families of New York, and later
the Vanderbilts. These families and many more
whose presence here helped transform Newport into
the Queen of the Resorts, built the mansions for
which Newport has become famous, employing
architects Richard Morris Hunt, McKim Mead and
White, Peabody and Stearns, and others. Several
of these mansions have become major tourist
attractions.
Newport's history has always been tied to
the sea. During the colonial period the city's
harbor teemed with trading ships. With the
arrival of the Summer Colony and the New York
Yacht Club, Newport was on its way to becoming a
yachting capital. The Yacht Club brought the
famed America's cup to Newport in the 1930s
where it stayed until lost to the Australians in
1983. The fishing industry is still a vital part
of Newport's economy, as is the United States
Navy, which has been in Newport since the 1860s.
Its major components were Naval War College and
the Torpedo Station (now Naval Undersea Warfare
Center) both of which were founded immediately
after the Civil War. The Navy presence on
Aquidneck Island grew and eventually included the
Naval Education Training Center and the North
Atlantic Destroyer Squadron which had its home
port at the Newport Naval base until the 1970s.
Despite the loss of the fleet, the Navy is still
the largest employer in the area, bringing many
industry and service business to the area as
well.
In the late 19th and 20th centuries various
groups such as the Irish, Greeks, Italians,
Portuguese, Filipinos, Cambodians, and Hispanics
joined groups such as Jews, African Americans,
and Native Americans who had been in Newport for
some time, enriching the ethnic diversity of the
town. African Americans from Virginia and other
areas moved to Newport and joined a thriving
community that continues to be a vital part of
Newport's history. The Irish came to Newport
in the 1820s, drawn here by the work available to
them at Fort Adams. Despite laws from 1719 that
discriminated against Catholics by denying them
the right to become "freemen",
Catholics who immigrated to Aquidneck Island
found a relatively tolerant haven from the
virulent anti-Catholic and Irish sentiments in
Boston and other towns at the time. Many of the
Irish families who made Newport home during the
early 19th century still live and
prosper in Newport, maintaining close links with
the land of their ancestors.
After World War II, one of the most successful
historic preservation movements in the country
saved hundreds of structures throughout Newport
County. That effort began in the 1840s when
George Champlin Mason, writer and editor of the Newport
Mercury (a weekly newspaper still published
today by the Newport Daily News) fought to
save Trinity Church. He helped found the Newport
Historical Society, which preserved the Seventh
Day Baptist Meeting House in 1884, and later
acquired and restored the Wanton-Lyman-Hazard
House, and the Great Friends Meeting House. Other
groups who have taken the preservation movement
to heroic levels include the Preservation Society
of Newport County, the Newport Restoration
Foundation, and several grassroots organizations
such as Operation Clapboard.
With the success of the preservation movement,
Newport began to recover from the economic
downturn that came when the destroyer fleet was
pulled out of Newport. The Navy continued to lead
the way, but a new kind of tourism - now refered
to as "Heritage Tourism"- began to
develop slowly. Visitors to Newport now come to
learn about the area's remarkable history as
well as to enjoy the beauty and the hospitality
of the city by the sea. There is, of course, more
than mansions for visitors to see in Newport.
There are beautifully restored colonial landmarks
for visitors to explore along with, fine small
museums, such as the Museum of Newport History in
the Brick Market which is a perfect place to
begin a visit to the area where visitors can get
an overview of the city's history. The
Newport Art Museum, the Tennis Hall of Fame, Fort
Adams, Redwood Library, Touro Synagogue, Trinity
Church, and many other attractions offer the
visitors an unrivalled opportunity to explore
aspects of this country's history. Music
festivals, such as the Jazz and Folk Festivals
and the Newport Music Festival are all major
events drawing thousands to Newport every summer.
The stereotype of Newport solely as a
playground for the wealthy during and after the
Gilded Age are in contrast with local reality.
While Newport continues to be home to summer
visitors of dazzling wealth, and while some of
them have made Newport their year round home,
most of the residents of the City by the Sea
continue to be middle and working class. Given
Newport's image, it is ironic that the city
also has the largest number of low-income housing
units in the state of Rhode Island.
Newport's history is remarkable in many
ways, but perhaps the most unique aspect is the
fact that so much of its history is still visible
on the landscape in an unparalleled concentration
of preserved architecture. It continues its
commitment to liberty of conscience and religion
and Newport's resilience and creativity in
meeting the economic changes that have overtaken
it offers strong proof that diversity works in
keeping the city alive and vibrant.
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