Since the 1600s, America had been colonized by four successive waves of immigration. Their differences of origins, from East Anglia, North Midlands, South England, to the English borderlands, together with the distinctive languages, religions, and cultures resulted in the variety of folkways, which was regarded as “the normative structure of values, customs, and meanings that exist in any culture”. This pluralism later converted into four different types of liberty and had a long-lasting impact on how Americans constructed their free society. When it comes to republican society, among the four different ideals, the Quaker’s Reciprocal Liberty and the Backcountry’s Natural Liberty were closest to the Republican concept of freedom. First and foremost, the Natural Liberty centered on freedom without let or hindrance. According to Samuel Adams, “The natural liberty of man is to be free from any superior power on Earth, and not to be under the will or legislative authority of man, but only to have the law of nature for his rule.” To be specific, the natural liberty gave people freedom to pursuit their own justice and expelled those who abused others people based on their personal views of morality. In consideration of republican society, the natural liberty was associated with the declaration of religious freedom. Unlike the previous period, when people were forced to believe in what the community considered to be right, the Republican Revolution supported common people to openly express their emotions and values in their own ways. Prophesies, diving rods, fortune-telling, astrology, treasure-seeking, folk medicine and even superstitious notions, which we had never seen before, were strikingly exposed. Additionally, it was not until the Revolution that religious groups were allowed to recruit members without restraints. No more required genteel learning, formal catechisms, and literacy. As a result, thousands of African