The Puritan Experiment
New England Society from Bradford to Evans
New edition
Distributed for Brandeis University Press
The Puritan Experiment
New England Society from Bradford to Evans
New edition
A revised and updated edition of a classic text on the early puritans.
The Puritan Experiment is an accessible, authoritative account of early New England, one with an enduring appeal for students and general readers. This revised and updated edition explains puritanism while incorporating fresh insights from current scholarship.
Tracing the puritans’ journey from the Old World to America, Francis J. Bremer examines the causes and contexts of the puritan movement and analyzes the cultural, political, and economic revolutions wrought by the movement in both Old and New England. A pioneering text in its field, The Puritan Experiment is sweeping in scope. Bremer’s examination begins with the English Act of Supremacy of 1534 which placed King Henry VIII at the head of the Church of England, and it ends with the death of the puritan theologian Jonathan Edwards in 1758. From meeting house architecture to the Salem witch trials, from relations with Native Americans to the founding of the nation’s first colleges, Bremer details with style and grace how “a living system of faith” profoundly influenced the course of history in the New World.
This illustrated edition includes new information about lay empowerment, the role of women, Native society, and the enslavement of Native Americans and Africans.
282 pages | 22 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2026
History: American History
Religion: Christianity
Sociology: Social History
Reviews
Table of Contents
1. The Origins and Growth of the Puritan Movement
2. Puritanism: Its Essence and Attraction
3. New England before the English
4. Sources of the Great Migration
5. Massachusetts: The Erection of a City on a Hill
6. Variations on a Theme: Connecticut, New Haven, Rhode Island, and the Eastern Frontier
7. Orthodoxy in New England: The Colony Level
8. Orthodoxy in New England: The Community
9. New England and Puritan England
10. The New England Way in an Age of Religious Ferment
11. Changes in Restoration New England
12. Challenges to the Faith: Pluralism and Declension
13. Race Relations in the Mid-Century
14. An Oppressed People: New England’s Encounters with Metacom, Governor Andros, and the Witches
15. Art and Science in Colonial New England
16. New Directions: Puritanism in the Neglected Decades
17. Enlightenment and Evangelicalism
Suggestions for Further Reading
Index