Sabbath in Puritan New England

audiobook

Sabbath in Puritan New England

by Alice Morse Earle

EN·~7 hours

Chapters

Description

In early New England the Sabbath was more than a day of worship; it was the very heartbeat of a fledgling theocracy. Every settlement was required to raise a meeting‑house—first humble timber forts with thatched roofs, then sturdier square structures crowned with simple belfries. These buildings served as the focal point for families who walked three by three to the Lord’s Day, where reverent prayer and communal discipline defined their new lives.

The book follows the gradual transformation of those modest shelters into the elegant churches that still dot the region’s landscape. By tracing legal mandates, town records, and personal journals, it shows how architecture mirrored the settlers’ growing prosperity and their unyielding commitment to a shared faith. Readers gain a vivid sense of how the meeting‑house shaped daily routines, social order, and the very identity of Puritan communities, offering a window into a world where worship and civic life were inseparably intertwined.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (455K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Distributed Proofreaders

Release date

2005-08-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Alice Morse Earle

Alice Morse Earle

1851–1911

Best known for bringing early American daily life vividly back to the page, this historian and writer turned old kitchens, gardens, taverns, and customs into lively stories. Her books helped popularize colonial history for general readers and are still valued for their rich detail.

View all books

You may also like