New colonies were formed before the 1700s because people were searching for a place where they could worship as they pleased. The colonists took it upon themselves to make the new world a place where religion was a matter of preference and belief rather then law. Some of the colonies, though, still took the road of the British and tried to combine church …show more content…
For example, Massachusetts was a colony that was mainly puritan while New Hampshire was mainly Quaker. These colonies had specific laws that made its citizens follow the laws of the dominating religion. In these New England colonies fines, banishment and other harsh consequences were penalties for people who did not follow the main religion of a specific colony. In other words, there was freedom of religion but each colony had a main religion that was followed by everyone who lived there. Therefore people who did not believe in that specific religion were discriminated against.
In the middle colonies there was a greater tolerance of religious differences although there still were issues with religious discrimination. The southern colonies did not have a problem with religious discrimination. Religion was not a part of southern life in comparison to its importance up in the northern colonies. The southern colonies concentrated on trade and economy rather then