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Four Steeples over the City Streets - Religion and Society in New York's Early Republic Congregations (Paperback)
Loot Price: R683
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Four Steeples over the City Streets - Religion and Society in New York's Early Republic Congregations (Paperback)
Series: Early American Places
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Tells the diverse story of four congregations in New York City as
they navigated the social and political changes of the late
eighteenth and mid-nineteenth centuries. In the fifty years after
the Constitution was signed in 1787, New York City grew from a port
town of 30,000 to a metropolis of over half a million residents.
This rapid development transformed a once tightknit community and
its religious experience. Including four churches belonging in
various forms to the Church of England, that in some form still
thrive today. Rapid urban and social change connected these
believers in unity in the late colonial era. As the city grew
larger, more impersonal, and socially divided, churches reformed
around race and class-based neighborhoods. In Four Steeples over
the City Streets, Kyle T. Bulthuis examines the intertwining of
these four famous institutions-Trinity Episcopal, John Street
Methodist, Mother Zion African Methodist, and St. Philip's
(African) Episcopal-to uncover the lived experience of these
historical subjects, and just how religious experience and social
change connected in the dynamic setting of early Republic New York.
Drawing on a wide range of sources including congregational records
and the unique histories of some of the churches leaders, Four
Steeples over the City Streets reveals how these city churches
responded to these transformations from colonial times to the
mid-nineteenth century. Bulthuis also adds new dynamics to the
stories of well-known New Yorkers such as John Jay, James Harper,
and Sojourner Truth. More importantly, Four Steeples over the City
Streets connects issues of race, class, and gender, urban studies,
and religious experience, revealing how the city shaped these
churches, and how their respective religious traditions shaped the
way they reacted to the city. This book is a critical addition to
the study and history of African American activism and life in the
ever-changing metropolis of New York City.
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