The Dollop with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds - 125 - Puritans VS The Quakers
Episode Date: October 22, 2015Comedians Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds discuss the terrible relationship between the Puritans and the Quakers in Colonial America SOURCES TOUR DATES REDBUBBLE MERCH...
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Hola amigos! Buenos noches! You are listening to The Dull Up. This is a
bi-weekly American History podcast. Each week I read a story to my friend
Gareth Reynolds who has no idea what the story is about. Whoa Jose! Take it easy!
Cat? That was perfect cat timing. I mean this name's Jose too. Yeah.
Do you want to look who to do? I'll do one bottle. People say this is funny. Not Gary Gareth.
Dave, okay. Someone or something is tickling people. Is it for fun? And this is not
going to become a tickly podcast. Okay. You are queen-fakey of made-up town. All
hail Queen Shit of Liesville! A bunch of religious virgins go to mingle and do
what? Praying. Hi Gary. No. Has he done my friend? No.
Yeah. July! Oh boy. July? 1656. Okay. Sure. When the Puritans left for England,
oh boy, left England for America, they did so because they were considered
heretics. They were not a tolerant bunch. The Puritans. Yeah. In America they spent
years creating a religious government called the New England Way. It was
based on the independence and power of the individual congregation. Okay. So the
colony of Massachusetts did not appoint like an overall head clergy and there
was not one body that regulated all the churches. Each church self-ruled. Interesting.
So it's like the states. Yeah. It is like the states. Right. But only one
religion was allowed. So you could only be... You could only be a Puritan. And...
But within that, if you were in a different church, they would have
different interpretations of being a Puritan? No. I don't think there's
different interpretations of being a Puritan. But then, within the... Within
being a Puritan, you got to kind of run your church any way you wanted. I feel
like that's gonna come back to bite them in the ass. Look, it's not a great idea.
Because, yeah, that's too... That's too much power. Here we go. So the Massachusetts
Bay Colony was a Puritan theocratic state in the 1650s. There was no tolerance of
other religions and religious outsiders were persecuted and banished. Jesus. The
Puritans thought if they let outsiders live in their colony, they would lose
control of the colony. Okay. So people come in with other ideas. That's not good.
Then someone's like, hey, that's a cool idea. No, it's not a cool idea. The way you're
talking about Jesus. Get the fuck out of here, both of you. You're banished. I love that. Wow.
Then in 1656, Quakers started arriving. And the oats they brought. Jose just did
a backflip. Dude, I don't want you to know that I give the cat cocaine,
but I think that's pretty clear. The first Quakers who arrived in Boston were
Mary Fisher and Ann Austin. Okay. Did not go well. Uh-huh. They were treated like
they had the plague and then brutalized. Brutalized meaning... First, their
possessions were confiscated. I feel like it's gonna get worse. A trunk they had
that contained Quaker pamphlets and a hundred books was burned. Okay. They were
strip searched. Interesting. Accused of witchcraft. Always a good accusation. And
then jailed. Jesus. Just for... And then... A different idea. While in jail, they were
denied food. Ah. Which people need. Yeah, you have to have that. People need food.
I've always said that. The windows of the jail were then boarded up so that no
Puritan could look in and see them. Well, because obviously their witchcraft can't
go through wood. That's right. While they were in jail, eight more Quakers
arrived on a ship from England and they were put in prison and beaten. I feel...
Are there more? Then an edict... Then an edict was passed that any ships captain
who brought Quakers to Boston would be heavily fined. Okay. Then they made the
captain who brought the eight Quakers take them back to England. Oh Jesus.
Worse than jail. After three weeks in prison, a man named Nicholas Upsall came
to Mary Fisher and Anne Austin's rescue. Okay. He had to pay a fine to be allowed
to speak to them. Wow. Because you couldn't speak... So you couldn't speak to
people of other religions, or else you'd get fined. So the only way to speak to the
two that were in prison was to pay the fine first. And then be like, yep, alright.
One conversation, please. He also paid a fine to be able to give them food. Oh my
God. What? That is... Well, I mean, you can feed them, I suppose, but you're gonna
have to pay the feeding fine. Alright, so that's... How much for all that? Well,
grand total after talking to them, feeding fine, looking at them feet. Looking them in
the eyes. Talking to them feet. You gonna be winking? I thought I might wink,
yes, perhaps. Winking, oh Christ. Thirty. Attack that on taxes, commission. 140 quid.
140 quid, please. The women were kept confined in prison for five more weeks,
and then they were shipped off to Barbados. Wow. Just for a vacation. Yeah. Thanks for
coming to America. Now get away. Then the Puritans got super serious. They banned
the Quakers in 1656. Okay. Then they passed, they passed a law against it, did
the whole nine yards. Sure. And then they did that again in 1657.
Re-passed that law? And then in 1658. And then in 1659. And then in 1660. Sure.
Each law would increase the punishment for being a Quaker a little bit. Well, I mean,
the punishment for just showing up was already pretty awful. Oh. But they were
also doing this because the Quakers kept coming. So each year they made it worse,
because Quakers were still rolling in. Right. Why don't they just build a wall? Oh God. If a
Quaker came to Massachusetts, they would send him to jail, or to be whipped. Whipped for,
for, or given hard labor. They could also be branded. Branded. They can have their ears cut
off. Why would they cut their ears off? Don't listen. That way you can't hear the views of
other Quakers. This. It's a thing that sticks out. And then if it's gone, people are like,
what did you do? Huh? What did you do? Why did it? What, what did you do? I think he's
talking to you. I'm not sure what's happening right now. Huh? They could also have their
tongues bored through with a hot iron. Well, that'll stop him from talking about being a Quaker.
That is. That's it. That's it. We've got our sitcom from the 1650s. A guy with no ears and a guy
with a hole in his tongue. Well, one of them doesn't have an ear and the other guy can't talk.
Tonight on tongues and ears. Or they could also be put to death. Jesus. It's a little
hardcore. Still getting over the ear cut off a little bit. Yeah, it's a little rough. That's
tough. That's a tough one. Well, the hot poker through the tongues. Not great. Not great. Not
great. The Massachusetts Puritans sent letters to other New England colonies to try to get them
on board as well. Connecticut was like, fuck, yes, we are down. All right. Rhode Island said,
no, we're good. They were a little more tolerant. No, sounds a little much. It's hilarious. They
were tolerant and Providence, which is like a big gay city now. Yeah. So, hmm, yeah, shit stuck.
Yeah. They also set up fines of 54 pounds for having any Quaker books or writing concerning
their devilish opinions. Sure. 40 pounds for defending any Quaker of their books for defending
like if you were like, oh, let him, let him keep their books. You're 240. What? Yeah. I just said,
let him keep their books. 40 pounds, 44 pounds for a second offense. So if you defended them
twice, but it being you can't do the follow up, you're like, hey, leave them be 40 pounds. Anything
else? I just think you should 44. Oh, what the fuck? 48. I swore jail cut off his dick. You would,
you would get put in like the stocks at this time for swearing. I can't. Yeah. And then we're supposed
to deal with the stocks would be that you would just how long would you hang out? You just hang
out there all fucking day. Okay. So the thing about I wish I wish that I could find this about
the stocks, but an author at one point said that one of the reasons the stocks were so horrible
is because you would get put in the stocks and then people would just come out at night and fuck
you. Oh, what? Yeah. What? That's that's what somebody said like that. But I can never find any
support of that. But also that's not something they would talk about if it is a really crazy time
to imagine that you could just fuck a stranger up the ass on the street. It wouldn't even be a
stranger if you're from the same town, you're like fucking Larry. Larry. Hey, man, it's from behind
so no one can see who's doing it. You just, hey, who is that? Hey, Bob. No, that is you, isn't it?
Huh? We should call this episode. You finally broke my sandal. Oh, did he break your sandal?
Jose had a girl. It's a boy. Whatever. So the laws are read on the street corners in Boston
and people and they would beat drum while they read the law for emphasis. Quaker George Bishop
described the punishment of one Quaker. The drum was beat. The drum was beat, the people gathered,
Norton was fetched and stripped to the waist and set with his back to the magistrates.
And given in their view 36 cruel stripes with a knotted cord and his hand made fast in the
stocks where they had set his body and burned very deep with a red hot iron with H for heresy.
So they put a guy in stocks, they fucking beat him with a whip and then they branded him with an H.
The knotted rope. The knotted rope. You know what, these are just good religious peoples. I
guess you knew at the time, but it would be the H you could just totally play off. Like it's,
I like horses. Yeah, exactly. Not just a big horse guy. Always love the pony. Yeah,
got it on there about a week and a half ago. Is that H for heresy? No, it's for a H.
How you doing?
No, it's for Harry. How you doing? I thought your name was Jeff. Yeah, it is.
What about the no explanation answer? Yeah, that's right. It is Jeff. Anyway,
want to get some ale? A leading minister in Boston summed up the spirit of the locals
with this quote, I would carry fire in one hand and faggots in the other to burn all the Quakers
in the world. Now, now, right. Baggots. Baggots means something different at this time. Yes,
okay. It means a bundle of wood. Right. But yet a hilarious quote. Yeah. Yeah. I'm taking off the
hat because it's so hot. You sure? Now, while it may sound like the Puritans were being total assholes
here, let's step back and look at the situation. Let's take a bigger step back. Okay. The Puritans
were English-reformed Protestants who wanted to purify the Church of England from all Roman Catholic
practices. Okay. But they were blocked from changing the Church from within and were severely
restricted in England by laws controlling the practice of religion. Okay. They eventually came
to power in the English Civil War but then lost it and the royal family was restored. Okay. New
laws were passed and many Puritans left some of them going to the New World to practice their
religion unfettered. Okay. I like when I use a word like unfettered. Sure. Yeah. They battled
the wilderness and starvation to set up their colonies and here the Puritans were supposed
to live exemplary lives in every respect so that anyone they dealt with, even strangers they met,
would see God through them and be inspired to see God. Okay. Now, obviously, when it comes to the
Quakers, they did that to different policy. No. They wouldn't even let them look at the Quakers.
No. And putting a hot poker through someone's tongue is not like you should, you should really
believe in our God. Yeah. Our God's better. Look, here. You ready? Okay. Who's your God?
Right. Who's your God? Huh? And then there are the Quakers. George Fox lived during the time of
England's social upheaval and war in 1647. He started preaching. He'd do it in fields and
marketplaces and meeting houses anywhere he could and then he started to attract a following
and they traveled around with him and at first they were calling themselves the Children of Light
or Friends of the Truth. Interesting. And then just shortened to friends.
So no one told you life was gonna be this way?
Quakers, friends. Well, and often they would dance in fountains. Yeah, they're just dancing in the
fountains. Fox just wanted people to know the genuine and simple principles of Christianity.
Sure. That's all. Yeah. That's all he wanted. Sure. Because there were many different Christian
groups in England at this time, it enabled George and his friends to kind of take hold.
Okay. So there's a lot of fucking religious shit going on. So
you can be a fucking crazy in a group and get a bunch of followers, right?
Without, because if it was just one group, they'd be like, kill them. But since there's so many,
he preached about his own personal experience. He was harshly
against immorality and deceit and told his listeners to live lives without sin.
He was completely uncompromising, very argumentative, and quite contradictory.
No wonder he was such a hit. This set the tone for the religion. The Quakers experienced explosive
growth. At first no clear outline of principles or tenets. What they did was define their views
by rejecting the ideas of others. They defined their views by rejecting the, so...
Yeah, you read that, you heard that right. So how do you find the...
They're like the Republicans. No! Right. Yeah. Okay. That's all. Right. Yeah. So they don't,
if you actually ask what they believe, it's like, well, I don't read a Bible. I tell you what I
believe. I believe you're wrong. What about what? Exactly. Yeah. Your whole thing. The whole deal.
I support the opposite of what you are doing. Bullshit. You know your thing? Bullshit. What is
your thing? What are you? Well, it's not your bullshit. I'm trying to have a conversation with
you. Well, we are having a conversation. All right. Cool. Yeah. Great. Cool. Great. I'm trying to
be nice to you. Are you? I don't know anymore. Maybe you'd be nicer if your God was better.
Goodbye. Goodbye. So long, asshole. You know what you gotta do? Join us, join up with us, though.
Well, I am looking for a group, so this is great. Thank you. So they're basically professional
assholes. Right. They offered salvation for all and a sense of unity with God, but most important
followers were urged to turn the light of Christ, to the light of Christ within themselves.
Scriptures were far less important than the inner spirit. Because of this, they rejected the
necessity of clergy to interpret and lead. Okay. So, so far. Yep. Go. The last couple
things you said, I like a lot about a religion. Okay. Right. And that's probably why they were
attracting people. Yeah. Because there's no clergy. Right. And it's about self growth. Your inner,
yeah. Inner deal. And you're in a relationship with whatever it is you're totally, totally agree.
Okay. It's almost not religion. Well, it's just too good to be true. It makes sense why other
people would put pokers through their tongues. The Bible was called, quote, a book like any other.
That couldn't have gone overwhelmed. I mean, that doesn't go overwhelmed now.
The stories of Christ didn't matter as much as one's own feelings of the present.
Heaven existed within the Quaker. Yum. Quakers also started claiming miraculous powers.
Okay. Interesting. George Fox said he cured over 150 people by laying hands on them.
Some took it too far. One Quaker dug up a corpse. Okay. Commanding it in the name of the living God
arise and walk. Hey, Ted. Hey, Ted. Yeah.
Up. Upsy-daisy. Teddy. For God who's in me. Get up. Yep. Why don't you come in, man? I feel like.
No, I'm getting. Barney's coming back, baby. You've been, you've been out there for a little
while. Get out of him. Teddy. Hey, Ted, come inside. Name a God. Come on, Barney. Ted, why don't
you come up? Name a God. Check it in the morning, huh? Barney, name a God. Let's go. Get him.
I dug it. I dug him back up. Oh, no, we all remember. The dirt's off him. He can get out.
Whenever you're ready, buddy. All right. I'm going to turn in. I'll leave it unlocked.
All right. Me and Barney will be in a little bit. Cool, man. Come on, get up. Hey, Ted.
You need to shower, bro. Ted, just check. Come on, man. I mean, that is so great when the guy
takes one guy's like, we're going to, I need a haircut. I command you to walk.
Uh, the Quakers also did a lot of shaking and shrieking in their congregations, which led to
their name. They sound like, um, what are the? Yeah, Baptists, right? Yeah, what are the? A little
Baptisty. What's Southern Baptist? Yeah, they got a crazy name, though. The, uh, the snake, the
snake holders. Yeah. Uh, they were destined to clash with authority because they did not believe
in compromise. Their first enemy was the church and the priests who lived in luxury. They wanted
to end university educated priests and instead have a ministry of simple men and women.
They had a democratic tone and attacked privilege. The wealthy were denounced and of course those
in charge started to become concerned and thought the movement would bring social anarchy. Yeah.
They refused to bow. Oh, this is England. Get out of here. They would not remove their hats for
superiors. Oh my goodness. Like a spit in my eye. And they would not acknowledge titles, which is
basically they just told all of England to fuck off. Yeah. I mean, seriously, if you won't bow
and you won't say a title, you're like, what's up, man? That's the king. How you doing, bro?
Oh, I'm not going to take off my hat. I got a hat head. Excuse me. No. You will bow and take
your cap off. Okay. No. I'm a prince. Right. Don't bend. Don't bend in the middle. Hat head.
What's your name, Barry? Prince Barry. Hey, Barry. Prince.
Printers and their supporters were dragged into courts on any charge that could be
thought of. Vagrancy laws began to be used against them because they were traveling
around preaching. So they were vagrants. New laws were written to target them. The Quakers
rise in popularity is one of the reasons the monarchy was restored. Many thought it was the
answer to stop the drift of so many crazy sex. Jails were then filled with Quakers. They were
the most attacked of all the sex in England. They were denounced and physically assaulted.
One preacher in Colchester was viciously hit by a blind zealot who struck him with a violent
blow from a great staff saying, that take that for Christ's sake. Jesus. Awesome quote. That goes
in the trailer. Take that for Christ's sake. That goes in the Quaker trailer. Quakers. That could
be a show. Quakers on an all new Quakers. Take that for Christ's sake. It's a fucking great line.
Ted finally gets Barry out of the grave. I knew you'd get up. But this wasn't surprising because
the Quakers were disrupting church services and even funerals. Oh man. So because they don't believe
in organized religion. They just don't give a fuck. When they see organized religion. Anything. So a
funeral or anything. They just run in and start fucking screaming. Fuck you. Fuck you. Fuck everything.
Why did that? Just chicken dancing down the aisle. A lot of time they just looked insane.
One Solomon Eccles walked through Smithfield quote with his body naked and a pan of fire burning
on his head. What the fuck? What? I mean he made his point. I mean he made his point. People will
be like what do you want to talk about? Hey man. Hey. Oh this burns. I should have put something
between the pan and my head. Oh boy. He was arrested. For what? I feel like. What did he do?
Well theft. Yep. Okay. The Quakers would be hit with stones, dirt, eggs, human feces.
When Anne Cock disrupted a service an angry tailor threw a pot of piss on her. What? Jesus Christ.
Well they didn't have bathrooms so they had you know I'm sure they were just like a piss pot over
in the corner. Oh yeah no they were all piss in the pot. And so she came in and the guy just threw
piss on her. Just like Jesus would have done. Threw piss on her. That's the same. That's in
that's in the Luke. Throwing piss. Threwing your bucket of piss. I don't know. They were they were
described as cannibals and Satanists. The Quakers became accustomed to being attacked. So these were
the Quakers that the Puritans knew of when they arrived in the colonies. Right. Make a little.
Yeah. Now you got a little. Right. They've sort of the. Now who's side of you on. White trash
off breed of the original concept. Well it's like it's like uh it's like okay so you got a
bunch of you got a bunch of cocaine users and then the meth the meth heads come in. Right. That's
basically what this is. Right. Right. And uh based on what happened in England with the Quakers
the Puritans did have reason to fear the Quakers would come and upset their religious state.
Yeah. Right. The Quakers coming to America were not peaceful religious people in the colonies
they would yell in the streets bang pots and pans shout during Puritan church services and also
of course strip naked. They stripped naked to show that they weren't attached any worldly possessions.
I mean they're just assholes. We're just describing assholes. Like you made me take
the Puritan side. Like they're just fucking walking out banging pots and pans. I like the naked thing.
I like the naked thing a lot. Is there any circumstance where someone banging a pot
and pan isn't just fucked. I don't think there's any excuse to bang pots and pans.
Unless you're three. Yeah. Oh no. Unless you're playing them like drums and you're a kid. That's
the only reason. But outside of that. But getting naked is a great way to just get it.
It's not bad. It's it. What can you do. Nobody's telling back then. Yeah. These people are. Oh
and this is I mean I guess like a naked woman back then would be insane. Oh yeah. But then
they had all the whorehouses. So not not the Puritans. Not the Puritans but still like the
in England in London. In the States too eventually. Yeah eventually whorehouses.
Enough about whores. One Puritan wrote over disturbance in sermon time there came in a female
Quaker in a canvas frock her face as black as ink led by two other Quakers.
It occasioned the greatest and most amazing upward that I ever saw.
So she came in with black face. Yeah. And in a canvas bag. She came in a canvas bag with
soot all over her fucking mug and was banging pots and pans going like.
At this time the Puritans also began to prepare for independence. They elected their own governor
and general court which was basically a legislature and a judiciary and they built
forts to protect their harbor and held drills for their militia regularly. This did not please
the king Charles II. Okay. He also wasn't happy with the Puritans because they had killed his
father. Oh and two of the judges who had sat at his father's tribunal escaped to New England in
1660 and were received as heroes. The problem was that because the Quakers were who they were
the more legal penalties and punishments that were increased against the Quakers
just made the Quakers want to come more. Oh Jesus.
Don't fuck with them. Jesus Christ. It's just it's like one of those movies where
they're shooting an alien and then they go don't shoot them. They live off of energy.
Or you just shoot them and they split into hundreds more. Oh God.
So more punishments means more Quakers but they keep increasing punishments to keep the
Quakers away. It seems like that's not going to work. One of those was Christopher Holder.
He was one of the eight who had been imprisoned early on. At that point he was just 25 years old.
As soon as he got back to England he immediately started trying to figure out a way to get back
to the colonies. He eventually found a Quaker boatmaker and got a boat. A Quaker boatmaker.
That's that's the spinoff. Right. And an all new Quaker boatmaker. I forgot what the first show
was called. The first show is called I mean I don't know if we necessarily gave it a title but it
was Earless and Mumbles. Earless and Mumbles followed by an all new Quaker boatmaker.
It's got to be more bendy. Special guest star. Michael Cain.
With a crew and some more Quakers some who were part of the original eight Holder returned.
First he went to Providence where he he tried to deliver a message from George Fox
to the leader of the colony Roger Williams. I think his name is Richard Williams and it's
got changed but Williams. Williams was a very open-minded man to other religions. He wasn't
one of the bad ones but even he couldn't stand the Quakers and he refused to take the message.
So they travel across the ocean and they go I've got a message from George Fox.
I'm good. Decline. I'm gonna go ahead and pass. I'm gonna put that in your pocket.
No you're not. Then the old spam folder. Get the fuck out my man. Out.
At this point Holder was traveling with another Quaker named Copeland.
They went to a town called Sandwich.
Wouldn't you go to Sandwich? Fuck yeah. Get the pasta. I love that one of the earliest towns
in America. Sandwich. Was named after it. Just simple minded. Simple lunch. We'll call this one
Sandwich and we're actually going to take the family down to side salad this afternoon.
But this is probably while they were like eating roots out of the ground. God I could go for a
sandwich. Imagine a sandwich. Eating roots out of the ground. That's it when naming a sandwich.
Eating roots out of the ground. Now in Sandwich they had just lost their minister.
And the minister of sandwiches? Yep. The townspeople were looking for someone to lead them
religiously and were open to the message of the Quakers. They're like yeah anybody come on in
and tell us what to do. This became the location of the first friends meeting in America.
Copeland Holder then went to Plymouth and were not received well. They had confrontations with
local congregations and were forced to leave. They traveled visiting several other communities
and finally found themselves back in Massachusetts in Salem. Oh god. Great joint. Great place.
Very casual laid back people. Yeah yeah. Super understanding. They went to. Always willing
to hear the other side. That's right. They went to a service at the congregational church.
After the sermon Copeland got up and back and questioned the message that had been delivered.
Excuse me. I have a question. Uh huh. Wasn't that all ridiculous. I'm sorry. Later.
I'm sure it went more like well that was a bunch of horseshit because they're Quakers.
Well they're naked. The people in the congregation were not down with it
and Holder and Copeland were beaten. Holder was pulled by his hair across the church. Oh. Then
a leather glove and a handkerchief. Chiff were shoved in his mouth in an attempt to stop him
from living. Jesus Christ. Another Quaker who just happened to be there jumped in
and pulled out the glove and handkerchief. The three were then taken to Boston and imprisoned.
This time Holder was held for 10 weeks. He was whipped 30 times as near to the same place as
possible with each stroke. Get it right. I mean that's hard on the guy with the whip.
Yeah. I want you to start a crease. I want you to keep hitting the crease. Okay.
Saw through it almost. Did you practice last night? I did a little bit.
I feel good. Okay. But once you hit in there, I want you to keep in the groove.
I'm starting to get a little nervous. What? You're really amping up the pressure. I mean,
I just I'm just like are you okay for the well you're not just going to use your job.
Oh, I'm sorry. Yeah. My job defines me. My work defines me. That's all I am. I'm a whip.
I'm a talking whip. Okay. That's all I am. All right. We're going to need another whip.
Oh, here we go. You see how he talks to me. Holder and Copeland and another man,
Dudney, were then banished from the colony. Even people who were supportive of the Quakers were
punished by the Massachusetts colony governor, Endicott. He was super hardcore. Okay. The Southwicks
of family, local family, found themselves in trouble for just that reason. They were in prison
for being supportive of Holder and then forced out of the colony. They had a son and daughter and
the governor tried to have them put into slavery. Oh my God. How would that even work? I know. Well,
but this is member of people or there's tons of slaves at this point. Yeah, but it's just like a
daughter. You just send them to you go go work. You know, you're you're living for that family
and you're going to dig up their roots. Oh, cool. And then we eat them, right? Yep. Awesome life.
When they turned 12, the local Puritans were not down with the whole slavery thing for the kids.
And the kids were... Slavery for the kids. Slavery for the kids. Slavery for the kids. Yeah,
your name. We're taking a vote. Yeah, yeah. I mean, this is a no brainer. Holder went back to
England where he sailed to the West Indies and then Barbados and then back to Rhode Island.
Copeland joined him there. At this point, there are only 15 Quaker missionaries in the colonies.
Holder and Copeland went back to sandwich where they were caught. They were marched down to another
town tied to posts and lashed 33 times. They were then returned to Rhode Island. Holder was seriously
hurt from the repeated beatings he had taken. And he went to Providence to heal at the home of a friend,
which he did. And then he and Copeland went back to Boston. What is he doing? It's fucking insane.
Why? Just because you got to go back and go, the light's inside of me, baby. Okay, we're gonna,
I guess we're gonna break you again. Good luck getting in there. All right, guys, I'm gonna
go to Rhode Island for a couple months. I'll see you. I'll see you in spring. If you whip me deep
enough, you'll see the light. Yeah, don't whip too hard. You better put on sunglasses if we're
gonna hit the same groove. What are sunglasses? Governor Endicott had told them they would have
an ear cut off if they got up to their Quaker bullshit again. But they went back. They're taking
ears? On July 1658, they were arrested, taken to a jail cell, and each had an ear cut off. Oh my god.
Oh my god. Jesus Christ. Word that their ears had been cut off, spread through the colonies.
They were playing stuck in the middle with you when they did it, right?
Doing a little dance. Yeah.
So, okay, so now, so now sympathizers pour into Boston. All of them are put into the prisons.
An old Quaker woman told the governor to his face that what he had done was barbaric,
and he had her lashed 10 times with the whip. Jesus, that's not how you combat that claim.
Not how you do. Not old ladies. Oh, I'm barbaric. You fucking bitch, whip her. Wait, sir? Yes?
No, but you're, you're sort of... Get, whip her, or I'll whip you too. But you're making her point.
I understand what I'm doing. I'm being nice. Whip her. Doing my job. Holder was then released,
and he had himself. The following spring, he came back to Massachusetts. Oh, what?
Old one ear backsguard holder. Yeah. But this time, he managed to avoid being captured for a few
weeks. Then he was found in Salem and arrested again. Again. He was beaten and banished. But,
as we understand our hero, he returned to Boston again in August, where he was quickly arrested.
I have light inside of me. God damn it. Get the light out of him.
Now the governor wanted to kill him, but was worried people would be too upset,
because Holder now had a high status and a lot of connections.
Imagine showing up to a town so much you got to get killed.
It's like, you won't... Oh my God. I know this is going to make sense,
because it hasn't been made yet, but have you guys heard of Michael Myers?
Have you guys heard of that? I know it's in the future, but have you heard of it?
The dude just beating the fuck out of him. He's taking his goddamn ear off.
He's not going to stop. I mean, I want to kill him.
Here's the weird thing is, you can't really hide me more, because you have one ear,
like we know who you are, the old incognito thing with the ball cap on, not working.
But he was not killed, because he at this point was so well known and had a high status.
In November, he was once again banished. He went back to England, but just five days later,
two of his Quaker friends were the first to be hanged in Boston.
Oh shit.
They would become known as the Boston Martyrs.
Unfortunately for the Puritans of Boston, a Quaker got close to King Charles II and said
bad things were going on in the colonies, and if it wasn't stopped, it wouldn't end well for anyone.
King Charles II vowed to put a stop to it, and did so by signing an order in 1662.
The order was delivered to the colony by a Quaker named Shatek.
Shatek was the same Quaker who had saved Holder from almost choking into death by pulling the
glove out of his mouth. He had also been banished and would have been told he would be killed if
he returned. Now here he was. When Shatek returned, the people learned of the order and yelled in
the streets, Shatek and the devil has come! You're like, please can we keep it down a little bit?
Could you imagine living now? Can we lighten up? Guys, can we just... Everything isn't attached to
the devil or God. Can we just fucking relax? But we're still... I mean, in this day and age,
we're still basically the same shit. We're still arguing over this fucking things that we have no
way of really having evidence on is what we argue on all the goddamn time.
Well, I mean, you don't have belief, but I get it. I mean, the evidence is in your heart.
Right. I know Jesus lives. I might have to whip you.
When Shatek met with the governor, he was told to take off his hat.
Nah. He did. He did? Then he gave the governor the order and the governor said he could put his
hat back on. Okay. Sure. And then the governor said they would obey the king's order so they
couldn't inflict corporal punishment on the Quakers anymore. Quakers who was said to be,
quote, obnoxious would be sent back to England for trial. He just sent them back to the factory?
Yeah, they just put them back on the boat. Holder eventually returned to New England
and lived in Newport, Rhode Island. In 1673, things had changed so much that George Fox came
and visited the colonies. Holder lived in the colonies for a while and was well thought of.
He had clearly won. But then things started going south again for the Quakers in England,
and off he went to suffer. He was arrested and jailed and put in Cornwall until 1685.
He was then pretty over the whole suffering for the cause thing and retired, so to speak,
and he died in 1688. The Quakers eventually calmed down. They went from being total
shit-disturbers to men and women who unnerved their enemies because they would try to convert
them while they were being tortured. That's a really great time to get people to tell you what
they honestly feel. It's like waterboarding. When you waterboard a dude, he's like, okay,
we got the bomb. There's a bomb. I got bombs. It's filthy. It's a dirty bomb. It's coming right
at you. Oh, air's fun. Quakers eventually became known for their peaceful activities,
their pacifism, as they are known today. How many Quakers? There's a few Quakers around.
Really? It's definitely a thing. I never see naked people with fires on their head, so I just
I mean, they've changed a little bit. They don't do that as much anymore. Once a year.
But if you see anybody outside banging pots and pans, that's a Quaker.
Good. Thank you for listening. Thank you. To that, it turned out to be a longer small
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Anything else? Do you love anybody? I'm going to fix some people are complaining that the
itins are not going, there's only a hundred showing, and I figured out that it's on my end.
I talked to Steve from my itins, and he's like, nope, that's you guys. That dude is the best.
He is awesome. We had a good little hang. Yeah. I think that's it. You got anything else? No,
that's it. You want a party? I'm ready to do a lot of coke. Sure. All right, I brought meth.
We're going to be giving it to the kitten. I brought meth. We're going to have... Hey, we'll be like
Quakers and Puritans. Here we go, girl. Yeah. Whoa. Oh. Oh.