BlueandGrayl
First Sergeant
- Joined
- May 27, 2018
- Location
- Corona, California
During the Civil War, Dixie/the South practically established a very unique identity from the rest of the U.S. one that still has influence today just like the Confederacy it was known as "Cavaliers vs Puritans" thesis. The Cavaliers vs Puritans thesis asserted that Southerners were the descendants of Norman conquerors in 1066 during the Medieval Ages and Royalist Cavaliers in the English Civil War while Northerners (or Yankees) were descendants of conquered Saxon serfs in that period and Parliamentarian Puritans in the war this was pretty much the progenitor of a Southern/Confederate identity as we know it but is this theory credible?
To be fair, I would find that whole Norman-Saxon part of the thesis a bit off but I do find the Cavalier-Purtian part to be true consider this the settlers of the first English colony in the North: Massachusetts were the Puritans themselves who were from East Anglia and the Netherlands who helped give birth to the region of New England as we know it while the original Southern settlers who established Virginia were from Southern and Western England which were dominated by manorial settlements they were actually Cavaliers who founded the Royal Colony of Virginia (where the Virginia Cavaliers got their name) alongside their indentured servants and the system they established there was based off the European aristocracy of old especially in the Tidewater region like their jolly old England in the Old World in contrast to South Carolina plus some French Huguenots (Protestants of French descent) in places such as Charleston and the French colonists of Louisiana (especially New Orleans) were also aristocratic just like their English Cavalier counterparts, in the eyes of many Southerners they were not the same as Northerners one was Anglo-Norman the other Anglo-Saxon, the Yankee accent was also originally East Anglian and the Southern accent was Wessex/Southern and Western.
To be honest, regarding Northerners especially in the 17th-18th century they were pretty slaveholding themselves (see Complicity: How the North Profited, Prolonged, and Promoted Slavery) the Puritans in the aforementioned Massachusetts had no problems owning slaves and that state already was the first American colony to legalize slavery/indentured servitude even before Virginia or any other Southern state it especially was prevalent elsewhere Rhode Island was by far the state that imported black slaves the most even more than the South or the North they had plantations that rivaled that of the Tidewater same thing was in Connecticut and other Northern states at that time, the state of New York was home to one of the largest slave cities at the time which was New York City where about almost half of its population were slaveowners to quote one history professor on the opening of a slavery museum in the state there were more white New Yorkers who owned slaves than whites in the South there was also Northern Huguenots who owned slaves next is New Jersey which was an enthusiastic promoter of slavery so much they actually apologized in 2008, the cities of Boston, Medford, New Haven, Newport etc were slave trading ports, other soon-to-be Northern states had slavery themselves Michigan's largest city Detroit had a lot of it (see Dawn of Detroit) and Illinois had examples of this especially in the Southern part of it.
The most scholarly analysis of the "Puritans vs Cavaliers" thesis I could find was Albion's Seed which I highly recommend reading to know about the different cultures of America, in that book it notes the origins of the Northern and Southern colonies as well as their customs and traditions like I listed above and the book contains a lot of information about where these cultures came from other pieces of information regarding theory include the book Cavalier and Yankee as well as the New York Times Disunion article Purtians vs Cavaliers to know more about this this thesis.
To be fair, I would find that whole Norman-Saxon part of the thesis a bit off but I do find the Cavalier-Purtian part to be true consider this the settlers of the first English colony in the North: Massachusetts were the Puritans themselves who were from East Anglia and the Netherlands who helped give birth to the region of New England as we know it while the original Southern settlers who established Virginia were from Southern and Western England which were dominated by manorial settlements they were actually Cavaliers who founded the Royal Colony of Virginia (where the Virginia Cavaliers got their name) alongside their indentured servants and the system they established there was based off the European aristocracy of old especially in the Tidewater region like their jolly old England in the Old World in contrast to South Carolina plus some French Huguenots (Protestants of French descent) in places such as Charleston and the French colonists of Louisiana (especially New Orleans) were also aristocratic just like their English Cavalier counterparts, in the eyes of many Southerners they were not the same as Northerners one was Anglo-Norman the other Anglo-Saxon, the Yankee accent was also originally East Anglian and the Southern accent was Wessex/Southern and Western.
To be honest, regarding Northerners especially in the 17th-18th century they were pretty slaveholding themselves (see Complicity: How the North Profited, Prolonged, and Promoted Slavery) the Puritans in the aforementioned Massachusetts had no problems owning slaves and that state already was the first American colony to legalize slavery/indentured servitude even before Virginia or any other Southern state it especially was prevalent elsewhere Rhode Island was by far the state that imported black slaves the most even more than the South or the North they had plantations that rivaled that of the Tidewater same thing was in Connecticut and other Northern states at that time, the state of New York was home to one of the largest slave cities at the time which was New York City where about almost half of its population were slaveowners to quote one history professor on the opening of a slavery museum in the state there were more white New Yorkers who owned slaves than whites in the South there was also Northern Huguenots who owned slaves next is New Jersey which was an enthusiastic promoter of slavery so much they actually apologized in 2008, the cities of Boston, Medford, New Haven, Newport etc were slave trading ports, other soon-to-be Northern states had slavery themselves Michigan's largest city Detroit had a lot of it (see Dawn of Detroit) and Illinois had examples of this especially in the Southern part of it.
The most scholarly analysis of the "Puritans vs Cavaliers" thesis I could find was Albion's Seed which I highly recommend reading to know about the different cultures of America, in that book it notes the origins of the Northern and Southern colonies as well as their customs and traditions like I listed above and the book contains a lot of information about where these cultures came from other pieces of information regarding theory include the book Cavalier and Yankee as well as the New York Times Disunion article Purtians vs Cavaliers to know more about this this thesis.