Yes, I am talking about the Puritans of New England when I say our roots are Calvinist. And I agree that the Church of England was also a very predominant force in the early settlements, all 13 colonies. But in New England Puritan values, mores, had a huge influence in the early days of American culture, identity. Hawthorne’s novels (his family was Puritan) are a fascinating study of Puritanism - mixed in criticism and admiration. I have old Boston ancestors - back to like 1660, even earlier I think in a few cases. I was amazed at how crystal clear and thorough New England records are. Church records, property records. The Puritans were very no nonsense, very structured society, with God at the center. It was the Anglicans that wanted the separation of Church and State that emerged in the US constitution, laws of the land. I guess I share Hawthorne’s view. I see things to admire and admonish in the “Calvinists” - who did come from England and Scotland. Also France - Huguenots and the Dutch Reformists who settled heavily in the New York, Long Island area. The French more in the South, but also New York a bit. And, yes, Calvinists are Presbyterians, but also Baptists to my mind, then and now. And today the Baptists are a much stronger force in Evangelicalism than the Presbyterians who fragmented in the 20th century, modern/traditional just like the Lutherans, Anglicans, Methodists (and Catholics

). I am often afraid of the zealousness of these Evangelical/Calvinists, and I even question the integrity of their Christianity on occasion, but I admire their religious determination and fortitude, staying power. I do see some of that in American identity - good and bad. Just depends on how the individual American understands/exercises it. A good example is the prolife movement, bad example is prohibition. That is my point.