Recently
I came across this article about sumptuary laws during America's
colonial period. Part of the motivation for seamen to turn pirate was
the opportunity it afforded them to flaunt these laws through dress
and manners. What you could wear and what after-work activities you
could participate in were highly regulated. I've included an excerpt
of the article here:
The Puritan Experiment with Sumptuary Legislation
JUNE 01, 1974 by GARY NORTH
In
1651, both the magistrates and deputies of Massachusetts agreed on
the following piece of legislation, one that is unrivaled in American
history for its sheer medievalism — comprehensive, authoritarian,
and thoroughly hierarchical:
Although
several declarations and orders have been made by this Court against
excess in apparel, both of men and of women, which have not yet taken
that effect which were to be desired, but on the contrary we cannot
but to our grief take notice that intolerable excesses and bravery
have crept in upon us, and especially amongst the people of mean
condition, to the dishonor of God, the scandal of our profession
[i.e., profession of faith], the consumption of estates, and
altogether we acknowledge it to be a matter of great difficulty, in
regard to the blindness of men’s minds and the stubbornness of
their wills, to set down exact rules to confine all sorts of persons,
yet we cannot but account it our duty to commend unto all sorts of
persons a sober and moderate use of those blessings which, beyond our
expectation, the Lord has been pleased to afford unto us in this
wilderness, and also declare our utter detestation and dislike that
men or women of mean condition, educations, and callings should take
upon them the garb of gentlemen, by the wearing of gold or silver
lace, or buttons, or points at their knees, to walk in great boots;
or women of the same rank to wear tiffany hoods or scarves, which
though allowable to persons of greater estates, or more liberal
education, yet we cannot but judge it intollerable in persons of such
like condition….4
Unless
a citizen was of a good education, or a military officer, or a civil
officer, he could not wear such clothing unless his estate could be
valued at £200 or more, according to a "true and indifferent
value." For a violation of this statute, a ten shilling fine was
imposed.
A
similar, though shorter, statute had been passed by the Connecticut
authorities a decade earlier.
The
wearing of lace by social inferiors had been the subject of at least
two pieces of Massachusetts legislation in the 1630′s. It was only
to be used as a small edging (presumably only by the upper classes),
and lace in general was prohibited from being worn extensively on any
garment6 Special import taxes were placed on luxury items,
"for preventing the immoderate expense of provisions brought
from beyond the seas." Such goods as sugar, spice, wine, and
tobacco were included. The tariff was 16% for direct purchasers, and
33% of the import price for retailers (thus making it more difficult
for local retailers to compete in sales with the more distant, and
presumably less compelling, London merchants).7
Tobacco
Tobacco
consumption, which was regarded by Puritan leaders as another
unnecessary excess, had been under fire [I couldn't resist] from some
of the directors of the Massachusetts Bay Company right from its
inception.8 All four of the Puritan commonwealths —
Massachusetts, New Haven, Connecticut, and Plymouth — passed
numerous provisions placing restrictions on the sale and consumption
of the "noxious weed." These prohibitions were not really
status oriented; they were motivated by a number of fears. One,
understandably, was fire. Boston was forever burning down in the
seventeenth century, as Carl Bridenbaugh’s Cities in the
Wilderness reports in some detail. At one stage, Massachusetts
prohibited the buying and selling of tobacco entirely, although it
was legal to import it for re-export later.1° They
apparently thought it was all right to burn down other cities, if
local merchants were to gain some profit in the transaction. Plymouth
tried to ban its importation in 1641, but repealed the law six months
later." Connecticut‘s ban is the most amusing in retrospect.
It was directly tied to the issue of personal health, but in the
exact opposite of today’s concern: no one under the age of twenty
who had not already addicted himself to tobacco was allowed to buy
it, unless he had a physician’s certificate "that it is useful
to him," and he had to present the certificate to the Court in
order to obtain a license to purchase the weed.¹¹
Time-Wasting
Taverns,
brewers, and liquor retailers were under restrictions throughout the
century. Indeed, some of these controls are as common today as they
were in the New England colonies.
Men were not to waste precious time in taverns, the magistrates
believed, so they went to considerable lengths to protect men from
their own weaknesses. Then, as now, licensing
was the primary
means of control, and it was equally a source of public revenue. The
annual licensing of taverns, said the Massachusetts magistrates, is
inescapable, "Seeing it is difficult to order and keep the
houses of public entertainment in such conformity to the wholesome
laws established by this Court as is necessary for the prevention of
drunkenness, excessive drinking, vain expense of money, time, and the
abuse of the creatures of God…"12
Although
it seems incredible today, shuffleboard was regarded as a prime
danger. There were not to be scenes of elderly men spending a
leisurely afternoon in the park playing this Devil’s game. Such
games were a sign of idling — a waste of God’s most precious
resource, time — and they were especially prohibited in taverns and
when practiced by servants and youths. The magistrates were willing
to go to real extremes to stamp out games of chance and
shuffleboard.¹³
These
regulations extended throughout the century, unlike virtually all
other sumptuary laws, indicating a continuity of opinion against
"vain pursuits." (It might be said that at least in New
England, shuffleboard
was not to be an old man’s pastime because old men were always
regarded as fully productive until they grew feeble; if a man could
work, he was expected to. If shuffleboard drew the wrath of Puritan
magistrates, Leisure World or Sun City or retirement centers in
Florida would have been regarded by them as nothing short of Satanic
— the worst sort of wastefulness of men’s productive capacities.)
As
in so many other cases, one colony did not participate in the
sumptuary mania: Rhode Island.14 But Rhode Island was not
a Puritan commonwealth. Its founder, Roger Williams, had argued for
the separation of church and state — not primarily to protect the
state, but to protect the church!
You can read the entire article here:
http://www.fee.org/the_freeman/detail/the-puritan-experiment-with-sumptuary-legislation
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