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RHODE ISLAND
is the smallest state of the Union, at a mere 48 miles long by 37
miles wide, and tends to be overlooked as a destination, even if
it is home to more than twenty percent of the nation's historical
landmarks. It was established by Roger Williams in 1635 as a "lively
experiment" in religious freedom. He had been expelled from
Puritan Salem for his radical ideas (including the notion that Indians
should be paid for their land and that there should be a complete
separation of church from state), and the Massachusetts Puritans
liked to call the state " Rogues Island ."
Despite its
size, Rhode Island has over four hundred miles of coastline, hacked
out of the Narragansett Bay; it is, in fact, made up of over thirty
tiny islands, including Hope and Despair. The " Ocean State
" therefore developed through sea trade, whaling and smuggling.
Partly due to this commercial interest, Rhode Islanders, resenting
the stringent economic pressures placed on them from England, were
in the front rank of the Revolutionary groundswell. However, no
Revolutionary battles were fought on Rhode Island soil, and unwilling
at first to abandon its new-found freedom, it turned out to be the
last state to ratify the Constitution. Between the Revolution and
the Civil War, Rhode Island shifted from a maritime economy to lead
the Industrial Revolution with Samuel Slater's creation of the nation's
first water-powered textile mill in Pawtucket, just outside Providence.
Today, although still heavily industrialized, the state's principal
destinations are its two original ports: well-heeled Newport , yachting
capital of the world, with good beaches and outrageously extravagant
mansions, and the colonial college town of Providence. Block Island
, about thirty miles south of Newport, has a popular state beach,
while the rest of Rhode Island is largely made up of sleepy small
towns and fishing ports.
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