@@skylahenry8552 My direct ancestor was Reverend John Wightman (m. Jane Bentley), brother of Reverend Valentine Wightman (m. Susannah Holmes), the great granddaughter of Roger Williams, The Founder of The First Baptist Church ever built in America in 1636 and the first governor of the state of Rhode Island nominated The Founder of The State of Rhode Island who was a student of Sir Edward Coke who introduced The Petition of Rights in 1628 before Roger Williams introduced The Separation of Church & State onboard The Lyon in 1631 after he came to America in 1630. The Separation of Church & State, many years later, transcended down into our U.S. First Amendment between The Danbury Baptist Association & Thomas Jefferson in 1803. James Madison was also present. The Separation of Church & State also known as The Establishment Clause to our U.S. First Amendment (U.S. Library of Congress, Smithsonian Magazine, Founders Dot Archives Dot Gov, The U.S. First Amendment Center, The U.S. Bill of Rights Institute, etc...etc...etc... Rev. Valentine Wightman and Reverend John Wightman were the great grandsons of Reverend Edward Wightman, The Last Protestant Martyr from The First Protestant Martyr, John Rogers, burned at the stake by Queen Mary I, the daughter of King Henry The VIII and Catherine of Aragon from Spain before King Henry The VIII married Queen Anne Boleyn when King Henry VIII turned against Pope Clement VII in order to found The Church of England (Protestant due to Anne Boleyn) who was influenced by William Tyndale, the first person to ever translate The New Testament into English from Greek (Latin). Of course, there were those in the past that claimed that Queen Anne Boleyn was more of a Protestant than Martin Luther (Lutheranism) was who was the first to translate The New Testament into German from Greek (Latin) & who also nailed his "95 Theses" to church's doors in Germany speaking of the corruption coming from within The Roman Catholic Church under Pope Leo X in 1514. (95 Theses 1517). Of course, John Rogers sparked The European Persecutions during The Protestant Reformation Era that led to The 30 Years' War, The English Civil War as well as The Great Puritan Migration (Mayflower, Speedwell, and The Fortune). King Henry VIII turned against Pope Clement VII in order to found The Church of England after Pope Clement VII refused to nullify King Henry VIII's marriage to Queen Catherine of Aragon, who was also the widow of King Henry VIII's brother, Arthur Tudor who died in 1502 before he married Catherine of Aragon in 1509. Of course, King Henry The VIII married Anne Boleyn in 1533 even after he she found out about his new mistress, Jane Seymour. Thomas Cromwell accused Anne Boleyn of committing adultery with her brother, George Boleyn which is why they are both buried beside The Chapel St. Peter ad Vincula, a graveyard for prisoners out of London. Queen Victoria had their graves exhumed in 1876 when she ordered repairs done to that church. Of course, Sir Edward Coke's Petition of Rights became known as The Parliament Bill of Rights in 1689 when King James II, brother of King Charles I, was removed from the throne replaced by his nephew, Prince William of Orange a.k.a. Prince William III. Of course, Rev. John Wightman's daughter, Mary Wightman, married Capt. Samuel Boone Jr. whose sister, Martha, married Capt. Samuel Rhodes. The Boone name long ago was known as 'de Bohun' as in Humphrey de Bohun, The Fourth Earl of Hereford who had his head split in two by Robert The Bruce after William Wallace fought King Edward I. Of course, Mary de.Bohun married King Henry IV from England long ago. Oh...I'm a descendant of The British Royals and also a descendant of a man burned at the stake be The British Royals in Litchfield, England in 1612 (Rev. Edward Wightman - The Last Protestant Martyr). Of course, President John Quincy Adams was also a descendant of The British Royals. Of course, so is President Bush, but I believe he is more of a Loyalist than a Separatist. Does that answer your question?
@@skylahenry8552 Hmmm...Who am I? Someone who knows who his ancestors were. Of course, there were only 25,000 Catholics in 1776 out of a population of 4,500,000 people - Encyclopedia Britannica. Of course, The Pew Research Center argues that the amount of Catholics in 1776 was just over 20%. Of course, the point being.....The United States was mostly founded by Protestants, and they were all Separatists fleeing The European Persecutions during The Protestant Reformation Era.
@@skylahenry8552 Oh...have a good day Mr. Henry. I have an appointment with my doctor due to my surgery. Damn staples are coming loose. Oh...I went through three major surgeries in the past year at MGH in Boston, MA. Pain....Oh..so tired of pain. My stomach feels like scrambled eggs.
I’m going here after I complete my cc. Do you guys have a soccer team ?
Graduation today 30/4/2021
I've admitted there from Bangladesh.. how much possibility is there to approved my visa??
Zero
Yes u r right.. I didn't get visa.
@@sakiratoma6851 what happened?
@@sakiratoma6851 why ?
What happened?
I don't thats depends on the mood of ambassador....
I like:)
I'd love to know why our past history is hidden. Oh....My direct ancestor was one of the reasons why we all have a U.S. 1st Amendment.
Umm who are you
@@skylahenry8552 My direct ancestor was Reverend John Wightman (m. Jane Bentley), brother of Reverend Valentine Wightman (m. Susannah Holmes), the great granddaughter of Roger Williams, The Founder of The First Baptist Church ever built in America in 1636 and the first governor of the state of Rhode Island nominated The Founder of The State of Rhode Island who was a student of Sir Edward Coke who introduced The Petition of Rights in 1628 before Roger Williams introduced The Separation of Church & State onboard The Lyon in 1631 after he came to America in 1630. The Separation of Church & State, many years later, transcended down into our U.S. First Amendment between The Danbury Baptist Association & Thomas Jefferson in 1803. James Madison was also present. The Separation of Church & State also known as The Establishment Clause to our U.S. First Amendment (U.S. Library of Congress, Smithsonian Magazine, Founders Dot Archives Dot Gov, The U.S. First Amendment Center, The U.S. Bill of Rights Institute, etc...etc...etc... Rev. Valentine Wightman and Reverend John Wightman were the great grandsons of Reverend Edward Wightman, The Last Protestant Martyr from The First Protestant Martyr, John Rogers, burned at the stake by Queen Mary I, the daughter of King Henry The VIII and Catherine of Aragon from Spain before King Henry The VIII married Queen Anne Boleyn when King Henry VIII turned against Pope Clement VII in order to found The Church of England (Protestant due to Anne Boleyn) who was influenced by William Tyndale, the first person to ever translate The New Testament into English from Greek (Latin). Of course, there were those in the past that claimed that Queen Anne Boleyn was more of a Protestant than Martin Luther (Lutheranism) was who was the first to translate The New Testament into German from Greek (Latin) & who also nailed his "95 Theses" to church's doors in Germany speaking of the corruption coming from within The Roman Catholic Church under Pope Leo X in 1514. (95 Theses 1517). Of course, John Rogers sparked The European Persecutions during The Protestant Reformation Era that led to The 30 Years' War, The English Civil War as well as The Great Puritan Migration (Mayflower, Speedwell, and The Fortune). King Henry VIII turned against Pope Clement VII in order to found The Church of England after Pope Clement VII refused to nullify King Henry VIII's marriage to Queen Catherine of Aragon, who was also the widow of King Henry VIII's brother, Arthur Tudor who died in 1502 before he married Catherine of Aragon in 1509. Of course, King Henry The VIII married Anne Boleyn in 1533 even after he she found out about his new mistress, Jane Seymour. Thomas Cromwell accused Anne Boleyn of committing adultery with her brother, George Boleyn which is why they are both buried beside The Chapel St. Peter ad Vincula, a graveyard for prisoners out of London. Queen Victoria had their graves exhumed in 1876 when she ordered repairs done to that church. Of course, Sir Edward Coke's Petition of Rights became known as The Parliament Bill of Rights in 1689 when King James II, brother of King Charles I, was removed from the throne replaced by his nephew, Prince William of Orange a.k.a. Prince William III. Of course, Rev. John Wightman's daughter, Mary Wightman, married Capt. Samuel Boone Jr. whose sister, Martha, married Capt. Samuel Rhodes. The Boone name long ago was known as 'de Bohun' as in Humphrey de Bohun, The Fourth Earl of Hereford who had his head split in two by Robert The Bruce after William Wallace fought King Edward I. Of course, Mary de.Bohun married King Henry IV from England long ago. Oh...I'm a descendant of The British Royals and also a descendant of a man burned at the stake be The British Royals in Litchfield, England in 1612 (Rev. Edward Wightman - The Last Protestant Martyr). Of course, President John Quincy Adams was also a descendant of The British Royals. Of course, so is President Bush, but I believe he is more of a Loyalist than a Separatist. Does that answer your question?
@@skylahenry8552 Of course, you do know about "Roger Williams University."
@@skylahenry8552 Hmmm...Who am I? Someone who knows who his ancestors were. Of course, there were only 25,000 Catholics in 1776 out of a population of 4,500,000 people - Encyclopedia Britannica. Of course, The Pew Research Center argues that the amount of Catholics in 1776 was just over 20%. Of course, the point being.....The United States was mostly founded by Protestants, and they were all Separatists fleeing The European Persecutions during The Protestant Reformation Era.
@@skylahenry8552 Oh...have a good day Mr. Henry. I have an appointment with my doctor due to my surgery. Damn staples are coming loose. Oh...I went through three major surgeries in the past year at MGH in Boston, MA. Pain....Oh..so tired of pain. My stomach feels like scrambled eggs.