Biography of Mary Barrett Dyer, a 17th century Quaker leader who was hanged in Boston for her religious convictions. ... Quaker martyr, Mary Barrett Dyer left little record of her early life, which may have led to a much bally-hooed and totally unfounded speculation that she was the estranged daughter of Lady Arabella Stuart...
www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nwa/dyer.html www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nwa/dyer.html
Mary Dyer: A Quaker Martyr ... Mary Dyer and her husband William were originally inhabitants of Boston, and members of the church there, having emigrated from England to the Colony in the year 1635. Mrs. Dyer and her husband became early converts to the doctrines of Mrs. Anne Hutchinson.
www.mayflowerfamilies.com/enquirer/mary_dyer.htm www.mayflowerfamilies.com/enquirer/mary_dyer.htm
Mary Dyer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mary Barrett Dyer (c. 1611 – June 1 1660) was an English Puritan turned Quaker who was hanged in Boston, Massachusetts for repeatedly defying a law banning Quakers from the colony. She is one of the ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Dyer
Mary Dyer was a follower of preacher Anne Hutchinson, who taught that the Holy Spirit dwelt in a justified person. This teaching was considered to be "Antinomian", or opposed to law, heresy by the Puritan religion.
www2.gol.com/users/quakers/martyrdom_of_mary_dyer.htm www2.gol.com/users/quakers/martyrdom_of_mary_dyer.htm
When Anne Hutchinson was banished for her spiritual beliefs in 1638, one person came to her side in support, Mary Dyer. She and her husband William had emigrated to Boston just three years earlier, and like many Pilgrims in Boston they had become interested in Hutchinson's spiritual thinking.
www.mass.gov/?pageID=mg2terminal&L=6&L0=Home&L1=State+G... www.mass.gov/?pageID=mg2terminal&L=6&L0=Home&L1=State+Government&L2=About+Massachusetts&L3=Interactive+State+House&L4=Inside+the+State+House&L5=Statues+in+Bronze&sid=massgov2&b=terminalcontent&f=interactive_statehouse_statue_dyer&csid=massgov2
A profile of Mary Dyer who was hanged in 1660 for being a Quaker. ... Mary Dyer sided with Anne Hutchinson in the Antinomian controversy in 1630s Massachusetts, for which Dyer and her husband, William Dyer, were banished with Hutchinson. The Dyers then settled in Providence, Rhode Island.
womenshistory.about.com/cs/religion/p/p_mary_dyer.htm womenshistory.about.com/cs/religion/p/p_mary_dyer.htm
Mary Dyer (Died 1660); Abiding faith brings death on gallow ... By LINDA BORG; Journal-Bulletin Staff Writer ; Mary Dyer was a gentlewoman by birth and a rebel by trade. ... Sources: Women in the Making of America by H. Addington Bruce; Rebel Saints by Mary Agnes Best; The Hanging of Mary Dyer by George Hodges.
www.projo.com/special/women/94root2.htm
Mary Dyer Trials: 1659 and 1660 ... Defendant: Mary Dyer; Crime Charged: Quakerism; Chief Defense Lawyer: None; Chief Prosecutor: No Record; Judge: Governor John Endecott; Place: Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colony; Dates: October 19, 1659 and May 31, 1660;
www.gale.cengage.com/free_resources/whm/trials/dyer.htm www.gale.cengage.com/free_resources/whm/trials/dyer.htm
A living history performance by Jessa Piaia featuring Mary Dyer. ... Born in England, William and Mary Dyer (c.1611 - 1660), emigrated to Boston in 1635. They became followers of Anne Hutchinson and were drawn into the "antinomian" heresy. Expelled from the Massachuestts Bay Colony by the Puritan elders,
www.gis.net/~mtf/dyer.html www.gis.net/~mtf/dyer.html