X-Nico

3 unusual facts about Roger Williams


Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations

Roger Williams having known Metacom or Philip his English name and Canonchet as children, knew of the tribes movements and sent letters informing Gov ernor of Massachusetts, giving prompt information of the movements of the enemy.

Providence Plantation was an American colony of English settlers founded in 1636 by Roger Williams, a theologian, independent preacher, and linguist on land gifted by the Narragansett sachem, Canonicus.

Roger Williams

Roger Ross Williams (born 1973), American television director, producer and writer


History of the Marranos in England

Petitions favoring readmission had been presented to the army as early as 1649 by two Baptists of Amsterdam, Johanna Cartwright and her son Ebenezer ("The Petition of the Jews for the Repealing of the Act of Parliament for Their Banishment out of England"); and suggestions looking to that end were made by men of the type of Roger Williams, Hugh Peters, and by Independents generally.

Humphrey Atherton

Rhode Island, according to The Proceedings of the Rhode Island Historical Society, 1881–1882, was excluded, not for reasons of religious differences, but because its founder, Roger Williams, had been banished from Massachusetts "for denying the right of the magistrates to take the lands of the Indians with out compensating the owners".

Pascoag, Rhode Island

The Nipmuc word for snake was rendered "askug" by Roger Williams in his A Key Into the Language of America, and "askoog" by the Reverend John Eliot in his Algonquian translation of the Bible.

Peace Monument

He worked in Rome after 1867, when he received the commission for a statue of Roger Williams for the National Statuary Hall collection.

Six Principle Baptist Church

Rhode Island founder Roger Williams was active in both Providence and nearby North Kingstown (Wickford) during this period.

USS Canonicus

Four ships of the United States Navy have been named Canonicus for Canonicus, a chief of the Narragansett Indians, who befriended Roger Williams, and presented him with a large tract of land for the Rhode Island colony.


see also

Madison Avenue Baptist Church

In 1930 the parish leased its property to be developed into the Roger Williams Hotel at 131 Madison Avenue, designed by Jardine, Hill & Murdock and named for the Baptist founder of Rhode Island, with the church sanctuary to be included in the 15-story building.