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Footnote
on Reagan's "City on a Hill" Phrase
By L. John VanTil
In recent days many
Americans were deeply moved by the week-long farewell ceremony in honor of President
Ronald Reagan. Among the many tributes were frequent references to his vision for America.
Numerous speakers, including Vice President Cheney and Supreme Court Justice OConnor,
specifically referred to, and even quoted, John Winthrops lay-sermon on
board the Arbella in 1630 as the prime example of President Reagans
vision for America. Winthrop challenged his fellow settlers to work hard, to do the right
thing and to carry out the purpose of their mission as they settled in New England. And
why? Because, he said, we shall be as a city upon a hill,
continuing with the observation that all the world would be watching to see how they did
in their little experiment in America, ready to mock them if they failed. The networks
replayed President Reagans delivery of this quotation many times during
the week and numerous pundits cited the line as well. Every one of the dozens who quoted
or commented on Winthrops phrase during the memorial events referred
to him as a "Pilgrim" leader.
In the interest of historical accuracy it must be pointed out that John Winthrop was not a
Pilgrim and that stating so on any decent history test would result in points being lost.
Well, then, who was Winthrop if not a Pilgrim? It is no small point to state that he was,
in fact, a Puritan and that Pilgrims and Puritans were not the same settlers at all. And,
it must be said that Pilgrims are admired by Americans, even admired in some history
texts, while queries about Puritans generally result in a frown and a negative
opinion.
The Pilgrims were a small band of dissenters who decided that with the arrival of King James from Scotland to occupy the English throne, upon the death of Queen Elizabeth in 1603, they had to leave England to worship as they saw fit. They first moved in 1606-1607 to Holland, which had freedom of religion. By 1620 they decided that they would be better off in America and so it was that after a stopover in England, they sailed for America in the Mayflower, arriving late in the fall. Their principal leader was William Bradford, who later wrote an account of their early days in his famous "Of Plymouth Plantation." A singular characteristic of the Pilgrims was their separatismthey thought pure worship could occur only when separated from the Church of England.
The Puritans, on the other hand, were
a very large group of people who decided to settle in America in 1628, sending an advance
party that year under the direction of Governor John Endicott. A year and a half later,
another contingent set sailsome 700 people at onceunder
the leadership of a new Governor, John Winthrop. In the next few years over 20,000 people
came to the Bay Colony under the Puritan banner. Winthrops
famous lay-sermon, which included the phrase we shall be as a city on a hill,
was uttered near the end of this voyage in 1630. Winthrop was Governor of Massachusetts
Bay Colony, as it was called, for most of the next decade, ruling with a firm hand. It was
from this colony that America received the flavor of Puritanism, not from the small band
of Pilgrims who landed a decade before Winthrop in another corner of what would later
become the Bay State.
If Winthrop was not a Pilgrim, how did it happen that he came to be called one by
President Reagan and then by dozens who quoted him or quoted Winthrop from their own
experience during the memorial ceremonies? The likely answer to this question involves a
long-standing erroneous reputation of the Puritans.
During the first
half of the twentieth century, history textbooks that commented on Puritans and Puritanism
had a decidedly negative tone in their interpretation. This negative tone probably arose
from the writers personal dislike for the strict Christian
views held by the Puritans, but that is a topic beyond the scope of this piece. Puritanism
has been rehabilitated by an outstanding group of Harvard and Yale historians beginning
with the work of Samuel E. Morison in the 1930s("The Builders of the Bay Colony"),
continuing with major works by Perry Miller ("The New England Mind") and Yale
historian Edmond S. Morgan ("The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop").
Their students and their students students have carried on this restoration of
Puritanism, therein creating an accurate picture of it. Indeed, I would count my own
"Liberty of Conscience: The History of a Puritan Idea" as a chapter in this
reconstruction of Puritanism. In brief, it is clear that Puritans were generally witty,
educated, hard working, and devout Christians. They certainly were not prudes as Edmond
Morgan has pointed out.
Cultural lag and simple
obstinacy, not to mention a continuing revisionism of American history, have prevented the
more accurate picture of John Winthrops Boston from becoming the prevailing view of
Puritanism. Hence, it is likely that whoever first gave President Reagan this quotation
did not know the difference between Pilgrims and Puritans. Or, more likely, this person
thought that using the name Puritan would undermine whatever positive message the city
on a hill phrase had. In that case, replacing Puritan
with the more positive little band of Pilgrims
designation made sense for rhetorical purposes. Why the other speakers, eulogizers, and
network pundits did not correct this error, or point it out in good humor, only they
would know. For the record, however, lets give credit where it is due: John Winthrop,
author of the city on a hill
phrase, was a leading Puritan founder of Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630.
L. John VanTil, Ph.D. is a professor of humanities at Grove City College. He is the author of the book "Liberty of Conscience: The History of a Puritan Idea." He is currently editing the papers of Calvin Coolidge. Contact him at ljvantil@gcc.edu.