Many significant characters are in history, but in my opinion William Penn took a big part. History is formed by people in order for these significant events to happen. We live in a world today where many important people made changes to form how it is. William Penn isn’t just another guy in the crowd; he’s made a bigger impact thank you think. We need to appreciate what all the people in history did from their accomplishments and impacts they had on others and not just their self.
William Penn was known as a founder of Pennsylvania. He was also an English real estate entrepreneur, philosopher, early Quaker, and founder of other places other than Pennsylvania. Penn was born October 14, 1644. He lived in the United Kingdom most of his life.
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In 1677, two hundred settlers from Hertfordshire founded the town of Burlington. Although this is a significant event, Penn wasn't with them. Instead he stayed in England because he had a project. He drafted the charter of liberties, and he guaranteed free and fair trial by Jury, Freedom of religion, freedom of unjust imprisonment, and free elections. In my opinion William Penn sounded like a very well successful, educated man. The king at the time was Charles II of England. The king had a large loan with Penn's father that settled things after Penn’s father died. On March 4, 1681, Penn was given a large area West and South of New Jersey by the king. William called this place Sylvania. In Latin this word meant "woods". I think this king was very understand and chose to make others happy while doing his job to make sure the people knew he cared. Charles changed the founded place to Pennsylvania in honor of William's father, but before that happened, Penn was the leading defender of religious toleration in England. Being religious was a law. The king was glad to have discovered a place for religious outsiders could come to such as other Quakers who wanted a different place to live away from England. Penn wanted to do this to make peace with everyone so they're all welcomed and invited. I think if a country went to war, we would be ok since we were trying to be allies with other religious people from anywhere. Since the King was in England, William made the first county Bucks County, named after Buckinghamshire in England. As Pennsylvania grew most of Penn's family migrated there, and it was welcomed for any other people to settle there. William wrote to the Indians to make peace between them, but he didn't want to acknowledge them wrong. He has a quote that says "Be tender of offending the Indians...To soften them to me, and the people, let them know you are come to sit down lovingly with them...Be grave, they
In 1682, he wrote the Pennsylvania Act; in it in Pen planned out his laws for freedom in the colony. Because he was a Quaker, Penn did not believe in war and he wanted religious freedom for all, but he also wanted all to at least believe in a God. Like Williams, he wanted freedom of religion but he had government much more involved in religious matters than William did. In Pennsylvania any religion that believed in God was tolerated and all citizens also received the freedom of worship. Despite the religious freedom, the citizens of Pennsylvania did have religious obligations; they were required to acknowledge God, keep the Sabbath, not take the Lords name in vain, or speak any blasphemy. In order to hold an office in government in Pennsylvania one had to take a religious test (Frohnen, 65). Their Freedom of religion was limited, and would not be considered ‘religious freedom’ by today’s
In his essay, “Peaceable Kingdom Lost: The Paxton Boys and the Destruction of William Penn’s Holy Experiment” Kevin Kenny argues that conflict between Europeans and Native Americans was indeed inevitable. William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, attempted a sort of “holy experiment”; a utopian land of equality and peace. Kenny argues that, despite the fact that “…Penn purchased land from Indians fairly and openly,” he did not do so for the Natives’ sakes (29). He had an agenda to sell the land to settlers and pay off prior debts. Still, Pen did want harmony and peace with the neighboring tribes and his legacy endured through hundreds of years (30). Despite William Penn’s efforts in creating a peaceful land with equality for settlers and natives alike, it all came to an end in a massive collapse eighty years later when the Paxton Boys entered the scene. The Paxton Boys were made up of a group of 50 or more “frontier militiamen” who went around to Native American villages, massacring whole tribes and then seizing and claiming the Natives’ lands for themselves (Kenny 29). Because these “Irish ruffians” or “squatters” weren’t really punished for killing entire Native American villages, other colonists started to follow suit and violent seizure of Native American lands became the norm. Kevin Kenny’s argument states that any chance of peace through William Penn’s vision was condemned by “…European colonists’
Pennsylvania colony had about 6 different Native American tribes. Pennsylvania is one of the Atlantic coast colony. The Pennsylvania became a colony in the year 1681. The religion that Pennsylvania had was Quaker. The purpose of the Pennsylvania is for Quakers did not have strict rules. Pennsylvania is also called Penn Woods. Also Penn Woods was named After Admiral
Both the Puritans and William Penn Viewed their colonies as ‘holy experiments’. How did they differ? Penn viewed his colony as a colony in which everyone was treated equally, including blacks, women and the Native Americans. This was unlike the Puritans who believed in slave labor and that women should not be able to conduct their own business(aside from being literal, holding public office or voting).
Penn and Winthrop led their people to the New World with the hopes of starting a new, safe, society that escaped persecution. Their contact with the Indians and their differing views of religion would help them shape the politics of their communities. They both came with the similar goals but they would each carry it out in their own specific way. These early colonists would help influence the founding of many other communities, bringing in many new ideals
William Penn was born and raised in England, but he is well known for what he did in the Americas. First and foremost, William Penn was a religious nonconformist and writer: he wrote numerous religious books over his lifetime. Second, Penn is responsible for the “holy experiment”: the colony of Pennsylvania. He was a Quaker advocate, and as a proprietor had the opportunity to practice the Quaker Peace testimony.
Did the Puritans really come to America seeking religious freedom? How did they reconcile their own religious dissent from the Church of England with their persecution of dissenters like Hutchinson and Williams? Does their outlook make them hypocrites?
Like many people back then they came to the one place that many went to ,to avoid getting killed. And that place was America. When coming to America some Quakers had already made their way to New England (a place founded on religious freedom), but the Puritans didn’t want them there. The Quaker some found themselves being treated just like when they Britin, with Some they hanged and others they banished. Later on, a number came to New Jersey, where they soon became so numerous that Penn took part with other Quakers in the purchase of that province. Some of these settlers crossed the Delaware to its western side. Thus when Penn reached America he found Quakers in his new province.
There are many elements to consider when discussing the establishment of the New England Colonies. For one, a number of English Puritans, in an organization called the Massachusetts Bay Company, decided to migrate to America, in hopes of a more favorable financial environment. In 1629, after much deliberation and an offer to pay out the original group of prospective settlers, only some of the Puritans agreed to travel to America, with an aspiration to concoct a Puritan sanctuary. A year later, they journeyed to New England with a charter from Charles I and with John Winthrop as their governor. The New England Puritans continued to be bound to their religious roots, but there were a few variations; the long-established worshipping practices that England maintained were not favored, and the notion of predestination spread. Over time, the Massachusetts Bay Company prospered, and it rapidly grew in size. Another important historical figure was named Anne Hutchinson, and she disputed matters regarding religion and women’s rights. Additionally, the Native Americans and the English settlers lived harmoniously and they assisted one another. Until, numerous wars occurred causing a rift between the two cultures. Some of these disturbances were called the Pequot War and King Phillip’s War.
The original Pennsylvania colony was founded in 1682 by William Penn, when the king owed Penn’s father a large deal of money so he gave him land in the New World. Penn used the land to create a new colony so that people who belonged to one of the many religions that were being heavily persecuted at the time would have a place to go. Most of the people of the people that came to Pennsylvania were Quakers that had nowhere else to go. Though the colony did have religious freedom, it was lead by and the majority of the rules were set by Quakers. It was a very strictly run colony, as the Quakers were very intolerant of immorality, so activities like drinking, gambling, and lying were banned, to the point that owning cards or dice was illegal. While
The colonial capital was called New Amsterdam and was built in the mouth of the Hudson River. The colonies welcomed Europeans from Sweden, Belgium, Denmark, France, and Spain to live in their colonies. Settlers traded goods with Native Americans from the tribe Iroquois. Colonists also traded with the Delaware confederation. In 1644 England took control of the Dutch colony in the middle Atlantic region. They split the land giving each side one name New Jersey and New York (old New Amsterdam). Quakers also moved to the land. Quakers were a society of friends that left their countries to seek religious freedom. One of the most important Quaker was William Penn, he founded the colony of Pennsylvania. He believed in freedom of speech and his colony would stand above the differences of religion. Penn kept good relationships with the Indians. The middle Atlantic colonies were starting to take
John A. Morettam author of William Penn and the Quaker Legacy, presents William Penn's life in a very informational and positively biased story through his years. He looks majorily on the side that William Penn's decisions were right and that his childhood and young adulthood, founding of Pennsylvania, and in his later years his selling of Pennsylvania were all done well. William Penn accomplished a lot and was an esteemed gentleman, and the author really portays him as such while describing everything William did, as well as his relationships. And so the novel starts off with William Penn's father's influence on William Penn Jr. in many different ways. In the beginning of the story it was neglect. He was
Due to conflicting belief systems, the Quakers were seen as a threat to the Puritans because they opposed some of the Puritans greatest values. In addition to challenging traditional beliefs, they also challenged authority and posed a threat to, “religion, the family, the social hierarchy-that the Puritans believed the Quakers wanted to destroy” (Pestana, 329). As a result of their conflicting views, they were subjected to mistreatment. In order to support her assertion, the author presents several different points that explain the origins of the conflict, and she supports the points with evidence from a variety of sources that she embedded into her work. She uses both primary and secondary sources to offer more valuable insight from the perspective of people who were present at the time of the conflict. To reach her conclusions, Pestana starts with explaining where both groups came from and the conflict’s origin. This is useful for when she dives deeper into their opposing views because, “in order to understand the initial confrontation between English Quakerism and New England Puritanism, these fears
Benjamin Franklin observed in 1747, “It has long been regretted as a misfortune to the youth of this province that we have no academy in which they might receive the accomplishment of a regular education,” instead of just perceiving that fact and being disappointed, Franklin decided to act. He noted that Massachusetts had Harvard, established 1636, and Virginia claimed William and Mary, established 1693, he did not want Pennsylvania to fall behind. This prompted him to write an anonymous pamphlet in 1747 entitled, Proposals relating to the Education of Youth in Pennsylvania. The pamphlet argued for the necessity of a college and urged concerned citizens to donate money toward it. It was not until Franklin wrote his autobiography that the world knew it was he who wrote Proposals relating to the Education of Youth in Pennsylvania.
The final outcome for the Pennsylvania Walking Purchase changed the course of history. William Penn’s vision of a city that was ruled by good faith and a seventh century Quakerism failed to exist. During the building process the Native Americans felt like Penn’s promise to them was broken and they cut ties with him. His vision of the city was hoped to bring peace among the people. So he named it Philadelphia, which meant the city of “Brotherly