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Gravesend
She was an aristocrat and an early champion of the cause of religious
freedom. She was also the first woman to found a settlement in the
New World. Her name was Lady Deborah Moody, and, by any definition,
she was one of the most remarkable women of the seventeenth century.
In England, she became a devotee of the anabaptist sect,
which held that baptism should not be given to infants but must
be withheld until a child has grown to understand its meaning. In
the England of the time, these were inflammatory notions, and the
country of her birth simply became too hot for her. She sailed for
the New World colony of Massachusetts Bay in 1639, but found, to
her chagrin, that it was, if anything, even less tolerant of religious
differences. Then in 1643 she received an invitation from the director-general
of New Netherland, Willem Kieft, to lead her small band of followers
into his dominion, and found a settlement, where, she was promised,
the residents would be free to practice their faith.
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