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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62656 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62656)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of William Penn, by Hugo Oertel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: William Penn
- Life Stories for Young People
-
-Author: Hugo Oertel
-
-Release Date: July 15, 2020 [EBook #62656]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILLIAM PENN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by D A Alexander, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: _WILLIAM PENN_]
-
- _Life Stories for Young People_
-
-
-
-
- WILLIAM PENN
-
-
- _Translated from the German of
- Hugo Oertel_
-
- BY
- GEORGE P. UPTON
- _Translator of “Memories,” “Immensee,” etc._
-
- WITH FOUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- [Illustration: A. C. McCLURG & CO.]
-
- CHICAGO
- A. C. MCCLURG & CO.
- 1911
-
- Copyright
- A. C. McClurg & Co.
- 1911
- Published September, 1911
-
- THE · PLIMPTON · PRESS
- [W · D · O]
- NORWOOD · MASS · U · S · A
-
-
-
-
- Translator’s Preface
-
-
-The life of William Penn is one which cannot be too closely studied by
-American youth, and the German author of this little volume has told its
-story in most attractive style. Not one of the early settlers of the
-United States had loftier purpose in view, more exalted ambition, or
-nobler character. The brotherhood of man was his guiding principle, and
-in seeking to carry out his purpose he displayed resolute courage,
-inflexible honesty, and the highest, noblest, and most beautiful traits
-of character. He encountered numerous obstacles in his great
-mission—imprisonment and persecution at home, slanders and calumnies of
-his enemies, intrigues of those who were envious of his success,
-domestic sorrows, and at last, and most deplorable of all, the
-ingratitude of the colonists as the settlement grew, and in some cases
-their enmity. It is a shining example of his lofty character and fair
-dealing that the Indians, who were always jealous of white men and
-suspicious of their designs, remained his stanch friends to the end, for
-he never broke faith with them. His closing days were sad ones, and he
-died in comparative seclusion, but his name will always be preserved by
-that of the great commonwealth which bears it and his principles by the
-name of the metropolis which signifies them. This world would be a
-better one if there were more William Penns in it.
-
- G. P. U.
-
-Chicago, _July, 1911_
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
-
- Chapter Page
- I William Penn’s Father—Childhood of Penn—Expulsion from Oxford
- for his Religious Views—Travels on the Continent 11
- II The Plague and its Results—Penn as a Soldier—His Religious
- Struggle—Becomes a Quaker—Imprisonment for Attending
- Meetings—Death of his Father 24
- III Penn’s Third Imprisonment—His Happy Marriage—Fresh
- Persecutions—Visits to Germany—Quaker Emigration 36
- IV The Popish Plot—Settlement of Virginia—The Royal Cession to
- Penn—Christening of Pennsylvania—Outlines of Penn’s
- Constitution 48
- V Description of Penn’s Domain—Negotiations with the Indians by
- Penn’s Agent—Death of Penn’s Mother—Final Instructions
- to his Family—Departure of the “Welcome” 60
- VI Penn’s Arrival—The Founding of Philadelphia—First General
- Assembly—Building of the “Blue Anchor”—The First School
- and Printing Press 72
- VII The Indian Conference—Signing of the Treaty—Penn Returns to
- England to Defend his Rights against Lord
- Baltimore—Accession of James the Second—His Dethronement
- and Accession of William the Third 84
- VIII Penn Tried for Treason and Acquitted—Withdrawal of Penn’s
- Charter—Death of his Wife and Son—Second
- Marriage—Journey to America—Penn’s Home—Attempts to
- Correct Abuses—Returns to England and Encounters Fresh
- Dangers—Penn in the Debtors’ Prison—Ingratitude of the
- Colonists 96
- IX Death of his Dissolute Son William—Penn’s Last Illness and
- Mental Decline—His Death and Will 109
- Appendix 113
-
-
-
-
- Illustrations
-
-
- Page
- William Penn _Frontispiece_
- The Duel 22
- Penn and the Indians 82
- The Conference 84
-
-
-
-
- William Penn
-
-
-
-
- Chapter I
- William Penn’s Father—Childhood of Penn—Expulsion from Oxford for his
- Religious Views—Travels on the Continent
-
-
-William Penn was descended from an old English family which, as early as
-the beginning of the fifteenth century, had settled in the county of
-Buckinghamshire in the southern part of England, and of which a branch
-seems later to have moved to the neighboring county of Wiltshire, for in
-a church in the town of Mintye there is a tablet recording the death of
-a William Penn in 1591. It was a grandson and namesake of this William
-Penn, and the father of our hero, however, who first made the family
-name distinguished. Brought up as a sailor by his father, the captain of
-a merchantman, with whom he visited not only the principal ports of
-Spain and Portugal, but also the distant shores of Asia Minor, he
-afterward entered the service of the government and so distinguished
-himself that in his twentieth year he was made a captain in the royal
-navy. In 1643 he married Margaret Jasper, the clever and beautiful
-daughter of a Rotterdam merchant, and from this time his sole ambition
-was to make a name for himself and elevate his family to a rank they had
-not hitherto enjoyed. In this he succeeded, partly by policy, but also
-unquestionably by natural ability; for although the name of Penn is
-scarcely enrolled among England’s greatest naval heroes, yet at the
-early age of twenty-three he had been made a rear-admiral, and two years
-later was advanced to the rank of vice-admiral—this too at a time when
-advancement in the English navy could only be obtained by real merit and
-valuable service.
-
-Penn’s father was also shrewd enough to take advantage of circumstances
-and turn them to his profit. Although at heart a royalist, he did not
-scruple to go over to the revolutionists when it became evident that the
-monarchy must succumb to the power of the justly incensed people and
-Parliament; and when the head of Charles the First had fallen under the
-executioner’s axe and Oliver Cromwell had seized the reins of
-government, Admiral Penn was prompt to offer his homage. Cromwell on his
-part may have had some justifiable doubts as to the sincerity of this
-allegiance, but knowing Penn to be an ambitious man of the world, he
-felt reasonably sure of winning him over completely to the side of the
-Commonwealth by consulting his interests. He had need of such men just
-then, for the alliance between England and Holland, which he was
-endeavoring to bring about, had just been frustrated by the passage by
-Parliament of the Navigation Act of 1651, requiring that foreign
-merchandise should be brought to England on English vessels only. This
-was a direct blow at the flourishing trade hitherto carried on by the
-Dutch with English ports, and a war with Holland was inevitable. As this
-must of necessity be a naval war, Cromwell was quite ready to accept the
-services of so able and experienced an officer as William Penn. The
-young admiral fully justified the Protector’s confidence, for it was
-largely owing to his valor that the war, during which ten great naval
-battles were fought, ended in complete victory for the English.
-
-Scarcely less distinguished were his services in the subsequent war with
-Spain, when he was given the task of destroying that country’s
-sovereignty in the West Indies. He conquered the island of Jamaica,
-which was added to England’s possessions, but was unable to retrieve an
-unsuccessful attempt of the land forces assisting him to capture the
-neighboring island of Hispaniola. He had been shrewd enough to make
-terms with Cromwell before sailing for the West Indies. In compensation
-for the damages inflicted on his Irish property during the civil war he
-was granted an indemnity, besides the promise of a valuable estate in
-Ireland, and the assurance of protection for his family during his
-absence. It was well for Penn that he did so, for on his return he was
-summarily deprived of his office and cast into prison—ostensibly for his
-failure to conquer Hispaniola. The real reason, however, for this action
-on the part of Cromwell was doubtless due to his knowledge of certain
-double dealing on the part of Penn, who, shrewdly foreseeing that the
-English Commonwealth was destined to be short-lived and that on the
-death of Cromwell the son of the murdered King would doubtless be
-restored to the throne, had secretly entered into communication with
-this prince, then living at Cologne on the Rhine, and placed at his
-disposition the entire fleet under his command. The offer had been
-declined, it is true, Charles at that time being unable to avail himself
-of it, but it had reached the ears of Cromwell, who took this means of
-punishing the admiral’s disloyalty.
-
-That our hero should have been the child of such a father proves the
-fallacy of the saying, “The apple never falls far from the tree.” His
-mother, fortunately, was of a very different and far nobler stamp. She
-seems to have felt no regret at her son’s religious turn of mind, for
-later, when the father, enraged at his association with the despised
-Quakers, turned him out of doors, she secretly sympathized with the
-outcast and supplied him with money.
-
-This son, our William Penn, was born in London on the fourteenth of
-October, 1644, as his father was floating down the Thames in the
-battleship of which he had just been placed in command. For his early
-education he was indebted entirely to his mother, his father’s
-profession keeping him away from home most of the time. From what is
-known of her, this must have been of a kind firmly to implant in the
-child’s heart the seeds of piety, for such a development of spirituality
-can only be ascribed to impressions received in childhood. William was
-only eleven at the time of his father’s disgrace, but old enough to
-understand and share his mother’s distress at the misfortune which fell
-like a dark shadow across his youthful gayety. Even then the boy may
-have realized how little real happiness is to be found in a worldly
-career, and how poor are they whose whole thoughts are centred on the
-things of this life.
-
-The admiral’s imprisonment did not last long, however. A petition for
-pardon having been sent to the Protector, he was released and retired
-with his family to bury his blighted ambitions on the Irish estate near
-Cork which he had received as a reward for his achievements in the war
-with Holland. Two more children had been born to them in the meantime, a
-daughter, Margaret, and a second son, who was named Richard. Here, amid
-the pleasures and occupations of a country life to which he devoted
-himself with the greatest zest and enjoyment, young William grew into a
-slender but stalwart youth. When it became time to consider his higher
-education, for which there were no suitable opportunities at home, it
-was decided to send him to Oxford—a plan which was deferred for a time,
-however, owing to an event which was of more concern to Admiral Penn
-than his son’s education, since it opened fresh fields for his ambition.
-
-This was the death of Oliver Cromwell on September 3, 1658. The news
-revived Penn’s still cherished plans for assisting in the restoration of
-Charles the Second, thereby laying the foundation of a new and brilliant
-career at the court of the young King, whose favor he had already
-propitiated by his offer of the fleet. These schemes he did not dare to
-put into immediate execution for fear of involving himself in fresh
-troubles, the parliamentary party still being in power and Cromwell’s
-son Richard chosen as his successor. But no sooner had the latter,
-realizing his inability to guide affairs with his father’s strong hand,
-resigned the honor conferred upon him, no sooner was it announced that
-Parliament had received a message from Charles the Second and was
-favorably inclined toward his restoration to the throne, than the
-aspiring admiral lost not a moment in hastening over to Holland to be
-among the first to offer homage to the new King.
-
-The knighthood which he received from that grateful monarch served only
-as a spur to still greater zeal in his interests, to which he devoted
-himself with such success that he not only won over the navy to the
-royal cause by his influence with its officers, but having accomplished
-his election to Parliament, was thus able to assist in the decision to
-recall the exiled sovereign. Again he was among the first to carry this
-news to Holland, thereby establishing himself still more firmly in the
-King’s favor. Not till these affairs were settled and a brilliant future
-assured for himself and his family did Sir William find time to think of
-his son, who was accordingly sent to Christ Church, Oxford.
-
-The young man must have soon discovered the deficiencies of his previous
-education and realized that he was far behind other students of his own
-age, but he applied himself to his studies with such diligence that he
-made rapid progress and earned the entire approbation of his
-instructors, while his amiability and kindness of heart, as well as his
-skill in all sorts of manly sports, made him no less popular with his
-fellow students. But skilful oarsman, sure shot, and good athlete as he
-was, he never lost sight of the deeper things of life. Indefatigably as
-he devoted himself to acquiring not only a thorough knowledge of the
-classics, but also of several modern languages, so that he was able to
-converse in French, German, Dutch, and Italian, he showed an even
-greater fondness for the study of religion. He was especially interested
-in the writings of the Puritans, which were spread broadcast at this
-time, glowing with Christian zeal and denouncing the efforts made by the
-court to introduce Catholic forms and ceremonies into divine worship in
-the universities as well as elsewhere. Feeling it a matter of conscience
-to protest against these innovations, Penn, with a number of his fellow
-students, reluctantly determined to resist the orders of the King, with
-whom his father stood in such high favor, but whose dissolute life could
-win neither respect nor loyalty from the earnest and high-minded youth.
-
-About this time there appeared at Oxford a man whom William had already
-seen as a child and who even then made a deep impression on him. This
-was Thomas Loe, a follower of Fox, the Quaker whose teachings he was
-endeavoring to spread throughout the country. He had visited Ireland for
-this purpose and, doubtless at the suggestion of Sir William’s pious
-lady, was asked to hold a meeting at their house. The eleven-year-old
-William never forgot the effect produced by this sermon. Even his
-father, not usually susceptible to religious feeling, was moved to
-tears, and the boy thought what a wonderful place the world would be if
-all were Quakers.
-
-Now that this same Thomas Loe had come to Oxford, what could be more
-natural than that the young zealot, already roused to opposition and
-imbued with Puritan ideas, should attend these Quaker meetings with
-companions of a like mind? Strengthened in his childish impressions and
-convinced that divine truth was embodied in Loe’s teachings, Penn and
-his friends refused to attend the established form of service, with its
-ceremonies, for which they openly expressed their abhorrence and
-contempt. He was called to account and punished by the college
-authorities for this and for attending the Quaker meetings, but it only
-added fuel to the flame. Indignant at this so-called violation of their
-principles, against the injustice of which they felt it a sacred duty to
-rebel, they began to hold meetings among themselves for devotional
-exercises, and only awaited a pretext for open revolt. This was soon
-furnished by an order from the King prescribing the wearing of
-collegiate gowns by the students. The young reformers not only refused
-to wear them, but even went so far as to attack those who did and tear
-the objectionable garments off from them by force—a proceeding which
-naturally led to their expulsion after an official examination, during
-which Penn had spoken boldly and unreservedly in his own and his
-companions’ defence.
-
-The effect of this on the worldly and ambitious father may easily be
-imagined. He had looked to his eldest son, on whom he had built such
-high hopes, to carry on his aspiring schemes after his own death, and
-totally unable to comprehend how a mere youth could be so carried away
-by religious enthusiasm, the disgrace of William’s expulsion from the
-university was a bitter blow to his pride. It was but a cold reception
-therefore that the young man met with on his return to the paternal
-roof. For a long time his father refused even to see him, and when he
-did it was only to overwhelm him with the bitterest reproaches. He
-sternly commanded him to abandon his absurd religious beliefs and break
-off all communication with his Oxford associates, and when William
-respectfully but firmly refused to do this until he should be convinced
-of their absurdity, the admiral, accustomed as an officer to absolute
-obedience, flew into such a passion that he seized his cane and ordered
-his degenerate son out of the house.
-
-On calmer reflection, however, he became convinced of the uselessness of
-such severity, for William, he discovered, though moping about, dejected
-and unhappy, was still keeping up a lively correspondence with his
-Quaker friends, so he resolved to try other methods. Knowing by
-experience the power of worldly pleasures to divert the mind of youth
-and drown serious thought in the intoxication of the senses, he
-determined to resort to this dangerous remedy for his son, whose ideas
-of life, to his mind, needed a radical change. He therefore arranged for
-William to join a party of young gentlemen of rank who were about to set
-out on a tour of the continent, first visiting France and its gay
-capital, reckoning shrewdly that constant association with young
-companions so little in sympathy with Quaker ideas and habits would soon
-convert his son to other views. Or if this perhaps did not fully
-accomplish the purpose, the allurements of Paris, where King Louis the
-Fourteenth and his brilliant court set such an example of luxury and
-licentiousness, could not fail to complete the cure.
-
-Little to young Penn’s taste as was this journey, and especially the
-society in which he was to make it, he did not care to renew his
-father’s scarcely cooled anger by opposing it, nor was life at home
-under existing circumstances especially pleasant or comfortable. He
-yielded therefore without protest to his father’s wishes and set out for
-Paris with the companions chosen for him, well provided with letters of
-introduction which would admit him to the highest circles of French
-society.
-
-The correctness of the admiral’s judgment proved well founded, and the
-associations into which he had thrown his son only too well fitted to
-work the desired change. In spite of his inward resistance young Penn
-found himself drawn into a whirl of gayety and pleasure for which he
-soon grew to have more and more fondness and which left him no time for
-serious thought. He was presented to the King and became a welcome and
-frequent guest at that dissolute court. The life of license and luxury
-by which he was surrounded and against which he had almost ceased to
-struggle failed, however, entirely to subdue his better nature, as the
-following incident will show.
-
-Returning late one evening from some gathering wearing a sword, as
-French custom demanded, his way was suddenly stopped by a masked man who
-ordered him to draw his sword, demanding satisfaction for an injury. In
-vain Penn protested his innocence of any offence and his ignorance even
-of the identity of his accuser, but the latter insisted that he should
-fight, declaring Penn had insulted him by not returning his greeting.
-The discussion soon attracted a number of auditors, and under penalty of
-being dubbed a coward by refusing to cross swords with his adversary,
-Penn was obliged to yield. But if, as is not unlikely, the whole affair
-was planned by his comrades to force him to use arms, a practice
-forbidden among the Quakers, the youth who undertook the role of
-challenger was playing rather a dangerous game; for among his other
-acquirements Penn had thoroughly mastered the art of fencing and quickly
-succeeded in disarming his adversary. Instead of pursuing his advantage,
-however, as the laws of duelling permitted, the spectators were
-astonished to see him return the rapier with a courtly bow to his
-discomfited foe and silently withdraw. He might yield to the prevailing
-custom so far as to draw his sword, but his conscience would not permit
-him to shed human blood.
-
- [Illustration: _THE DUEL_]
-
-It was with the greatest satisfaction that Sir William learned of the
-change that had been wrought in his son, and to make it yet more
-permanent and effectual he ordered him to remain abroad, extending his
-travels to other countries. He was now in a position to afford this, as
-through the favor of the King’s brother, the Duke of York, he had
-received an important and lucrative post in the admiralty, but he would
-gladly have made any sacrifice to have his son return the kind of man he
-wished him to be. But the father’s hopes ran too high. Although
-outwardly become a man of the world, William had by no means lost all
-serious purpose in the vortex of Parisian life, for he spent some time
-at Saumur, on the Loire, attracted thither by the fame of Moses
-Amyrault, a divine, under whose teaching he remained for some time and
-of whom he became a zealous adherent. From there, by his father’s
-orders, he travelled through various parts of France and then turned his
-steps toward Italy in order to become as familiar with the language as
-he already had with French, and to cultivate his taste in art by a study
-of the rich treasures of that country.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter II
- The Plague and its Results—Penn as a Soldier—His Religious
- Struggle—Becomes a Quaker—Imprisonment for Attending Meetings—Death of
- his Father
-
-
-In 1664 another war broke out between England and Holland, owing to the
-refusal of the latter to allow the existence of English colonies on the
-coast of Guinea, where the Dutch had hitherto enjoyed the exclusive
-trade. Admiral de Ruyter was ordered to destroy these settlements and a
-declaration of war followed. The Duke of York, then Lord High Admiral of
-England, believing the services of his friend Admiral Penn indispensable
-at such a juncture, appointed him to the command of his own flagship
-with the title of Great Commander. This compelled Sir William to recall
-young Penn to take charge of the family affairs during his absence.
-Rumors of Louis the Fourteenth’s favorable disposition toward the Dutch
-also made him fear for his son’s safety in France. The change wrought in
-William by his two years’ absence could not fail to delight the admiral.
-The seriousness of mind which had formerly led him to avoid all worldly
-pleasures had vanished and was replaced by a youthful vivacity of manner
-and a ready wit in conversation that were most charming. In appearance
-too he had improved greatly, having grown into a tall and handsome man,
-his face marked by an expression of singular sweetness and gentleness,
-yet full of intelligence and resolution.
-
-To prevent any return to his former habits, his father took pains to
-keep him surrounded by companions of rank and wealth and amid the
-associations of a court little behind that of France in the matter of
-license and extravagance. He also had him entered at Lincoln’s Inn as a
-student of law, a knowledge of which would be indispensable in the lofty
-position to which he aspired for his son and heir. And why should not
-these hopes of future distinction be realized? Was he not in high favor
-not only with the King, but also with the Duke of York, who must succeed
-to the throne on the death of Charles? Nevertheless, the admiral must
-still have had doubts as to the permanence of this unexpected and most
-welcome change, for when he sailed with the Duke of York in March, 1665,
-he took William with him, feeling it safest, no doubt, to keep him for a
-time under his own eye and away from all temptation to relapse into his
-old ways. These prudent calculations were soon upset, however, for three
-weeks later, when the first engagement with the Dutch fleet took place,
-young Penn was sent back by the Duke of York with despatches to the King
-announcing the victory. As the bearer of these tidings he was naturally
-made welcome at court and remained in London, continuing his law
-studies.
-
-Then came the plague, which broke out in London with such violence as to
-terrify even the most worldly and force upon them the thought of death.
-Persons seemingly in perfect health would suddenly fall dead in the
-streets, as many as ten thousand deaths occurring in a single day. All
-who were able to escape fled from the city, while those who could not
-get away shut themselves up in their houses, scarcely venturing forth to
-obtain even the necessities of life. The terrible scenes which met the
-eye at every turn quickly banished William’s newly acquired worldliness
-and turned his thoughts once more to serious things. Religious questions
-absorbed his whole mind and became of far greater importance to him than
-those of law, with which he should have been occupying himself.
-
-Sir William observed this new change with alarm and displeasure on his
-return with the fleet, and even more so when his services were rewarded
-by the King not only by large additions to his Irish estates, but also
-by promises of still higher preferment in the future. Of what use would
-these honors be if the son who was to inherit them insisted on embracing
-a vocation that utterly unfitted him for such a position? Again he cast
-about for a remedy that should prove as effectual as the sojourn in
-France had been, and this time he sent his son to the Duke of Ormond,
-Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, whose court, though a gay and brilliant one,
-was not so profligate as those at Paris and London. The admiral had
-overlooked one fact, however, in his choice of residence for his son;
-namely, that there were many Quakers in Ireland.
-
-The letters which he carried procured young Penn an instant welcome to
-court circles in Dublin, where his attractive person and his cleverness
-soon made him popular. Again he found himself plunged into a whirl of
-gayety and pleasure, to which he abandoned himself the more readily as
-it involved no especial reproach of conscience. Soon after his arrival
-he volunteered to join an expedition commanded by the Duke’s son, Lord
-Arran, to reduce some mutinous troops to obedience, and bore himself
-with so much coolness and courage that the viceroy wrote to Sir William
-expressing his satisfaction with young Penn’s conduct and proposing that
-he should embrace a military career, for which he seemed so well
-adapted. Greatly to William’s disappointment, however, the admiral
-refused his consent, having other plans for the future. There was also
-work for him now wherein he could utilize his knowledge of law, some
-question having arisen as to the title of the large estates recently
-granted the admiral by Charles the Second. The matter having to be
-settled by law, William was intrusted by his father with the trial of
-the case, which he succeeded in winning.
-
-One day while at Cork, near which his father’s property was situated, he
-recognized in a shopkeeper of whom he was making some purchases one of
-the women who had been present at that never-to-be-forgotten meeting
-held at his father’s house by Thomas Loe. Much pleased at thus
-discovering an old acquaintance, the conversation naturally turned to
-religious subjects, and on William’s expressing the wish that he might
-again see and hear the famous preacher, the Quakeress informed him that
-Loe was then living in Cork and would hold one of his usual meetings the
-following day. It is needless to say that young Penn was present on that
-occasion and his Oxford experience was repeated. Loe’s sermon seemed
-aimed directly at him, for it was on “the faith that overcometh the
-world and the faith that is overcome by the world.” As the first part of
-the sermon, wherein the preacher depicted with glowing enthusiasm the
-splendid fruits of that faith that overcometh, awoke in the young man’s
-heart memories of the true peace and happiness that had been his so long
-as he had remained true to his beliefs, so the second part, dealing with
-the faith that succumbs to worldly temptations, fell like blows upon his
-conscience. Bitter remorse for his frivolous life of the last few years
-overwhelmed him, and Loe, to whom he presented himself at the close of
-the meeting, perceiving his state of mind, did not fail to strengthen
-the effect of his discourse by the most solemn exhortations.
-
-For a time filial duty and worldly ambition struggled against the voice
-of awakened conscience, but the latter finally triumphed. Penn now
-became a regular attendant at the Quaker meetings and belonged, in heart
-at least, to the persecuted sect. In September, 1667, while present at
-one of these meetings, usually held with as much secrecy as possible, in
-order to avoid the jeers of the rabble, the place was suddenly invaded
-by order of the mayor and all the participants arrested. Finding the son
-of so distinguished a personage as Sir William Penn among the prisoners,
-the astonished official offered to release him at once if he would
-promise not to repeat the offence, but Penn refused to enjoy any
-advantages over his companions and went with them to prison. While there
-he wrote to the Earl of Orrery, complaining of the injustice of his
-imprisonment, since the practice of religious worship could be called
-neither a criminal offence nor a disturbance of the peace. On receipt of
-this letter an order was given for his immediate release, but the report
-that he had joined the Quakers quickly spread, calling forth both
-derision and indignation among his friends at court.
-
-When this rumor reached the admiral, who feared nothing so much as
-ridicule, he promptly ordered his son to join him in London. Finding him
-still in the dress of a gentleman with sword and plume, he felt somewhat
-reassured and began to hope that after all he might have been
-misinformed, but the next day, when he took William to task for keeping
-his hat on in his presence, the youth frankly confessed that he had
-become a Quaker. Threats and arguments proving alike useless, the
-admiral then gave him an hour’s time to consider whether he would not at
-least remove his hat before the King and the Duke of York, that his
-future prospects and position at court might not be ruined. But
-William’s resolution had been fully matured during his imprisonment at
-Cork, and his conversion was a serious matter of conscience. He was
-forced to admit to himself therefore that such a concession would be a
-violation of his principles, and announced at the end of the time that
-it would be impossible for him to comply with his father’s wishes. At
-this the admiral’s hitherto restrained anger burst all bounds.
-Infuriated because all his plans and ambitions for the future were
-baffled by what seemed to him a mere notion, he heaped abuse and
-reproaches on his son and finally ordered him from the house with
-threats of disinheritance.
-
-This was a severe test of Penn’s religious convictions. Not only was he
-passionately devoted to his mother, on whose sympathy and support he
-could always count, but he also had the deepest respect and regard for
-his father, in spite of their widely different views, but his conscience
-demanded the sacrifice and he made it, leaving his home and all his
-former associations. Now that the die was cast he laid aside his worldly
-dress and openly professed himself as belonging to the Friends, as they
-were called, who welcomed him with open arms. It would have fared ill
-with him, however, accustomed as he was to a life of affluence and ease,
-had it not been for his mother, who provided him with money from time to
-time as she found an opportunity.
-
-It was not long, however, before the admiral relented, owing chiefly to
-her efforts in his behalf, and allowed him to return home, though still
-refusing to see or hold any communication with him. It must indeed have
-been a crushing blow to the proud and ambitious man of the world to have
-his son and heir travelling about the country as a poor preacher, for it
-was about this time, 1668, that William first began to preach. He also
-utilized his learning and talents by writing in defence of the new
-doctrines he had embraced. One of these publications, entitled “The
-Sandy Foundation Shaken,” attracted much attention. In it he cleverly
-attempted to prove that certain fundamental doctrines of the established
-church were contrary to Scripture—a heresy for which the Bishop of
-London had him imprisoned. Indeed his malicious enemies went so far as
-to claim that Penn had dropped a letter at the time of his arrest,
-written by himself and containing treasonable matter, but although his
-innocence on this point was soon established, he was forced,
-nevertheless, to remain for nine months in the Tower. Even the King, to
-whom Sir William appealed on his son’s behalf, did not dare to intervene
-for fear of increasing the suspicion, in which he already stood, of
-being an enemy to the church. All he could do was to send the court
-chaplain to visit Penn and urge him to make amends to the irate Bishop,
-who was determined he should publicly retract his published statements
-or end his days in prison. But this the young enthusiast refused to do,
-replying with the spirit of a martyr that his prison should be his grave
-before he would renounce his just opinions; that for his conscience he
-was responsible to no man.
-
-This period of enforced idleness was by no means wasted, however. While
-at the Tower he wrote “No Cross, No Crown,” perhaps the best known and
-most popular of all his works, wherein for his own consolation as well
-as that of his persecuted brethren he explained the need for all true
-Christians to bear the cross. Another, called “Innocence with her Open
-Face,” further expounded certain disputed passages in the Holy Book that
-had shared his imprisonment. The manly firmness and courage with which
-Penn bore his long confinement without allowing his newly adopted
-beliefs to be shaken forced universal respect and sympathy and even
-softened his father’s wrath at last. The admiral himself had been having
-troubles. False accusations made against him by his enemies had so
-preyed on his mind that his health had given way, and he had been forced
-to resign his post in the admiralty and retire to private life. He
-visited his son several times in prison, and his appeals to the Duke of
-York finally secured William’s release, without the recantation demanded
-by the Bishop. Further residence in London at that time being
-undesirable, however, he went back to his father’s estate in Ireland.
-Here he labored unceasingly for the liberation of his friends in Cork,
-who were still languishing in prison, and at last had the joy of seeing
-his efforts crowned with success by securing their pardon from the Duke
-of Ormond.
-
-At the end of eight months he returned again to England at the wish of
-his father, whose rapidly failing health made him long for his eldest
-son. He had fully relented toward him by this time and a complete
-reconciliation now took place, greatly to the joy of all parties. But
-the year 1670, which brought this happiness to Penn, was also one of
-trial for him, owing to the revival of the law against dissenters, as
-all who differed from the doctrines of the established church were
-called, declaring assemblies of more than five persons for religious
-purposes unlawful and making offenders punishable by heavy fines or even
-banishment. Among the thousands thus deprived of liberty and property,
-being at the mercy of the meanest informer, one of the first to suffer
-was William Penn.
-
-On the fourteenth of August, 1670, the Quakers found their usual place
-of meeting in London closed and occupied by soldiery. When Penn arrived
-on the scene with his friend William Mead he attempted to address the
-assembled crowd, urging them to disperse quietly and offer no
-resistance, which would be quite useless. But as soon as he began to
-speak both he and Mead were arrested and taken to prison by warrants
-from the mayor of London for having attended a proscribed meeting and
-furthermore caused a disturbance of the peace. The prisoners were tried
-before a jury on September third. Although the three witnesses brought
-against them could produce no testimony to confirm the charge, Penn
-voluntarily confessed that he had intended to preach and claimed it as a
-sacred right. In spite of all the indignities and abuse permitted by the
-court, he pleaded his cause so stoutly and so eloquently that the jury
-pronounced a verdict of not guilty. This was far from pleasing to the
-judges, who were bent on having Penn punished, so the jury were sent
-back to reconsider, and when they persisted were locked up for two days
-without food or water and threatened with starvation unless a verdict
-were reached which could be accepted by the court. Even this proving
-ineffectual they were fined for their obstinacy, and refusing to pay
-these fines were sent to prison, while Penn and his friend Mead, instead
-of being released, were still kept in confinement for refusing to pay a
-fine which had been arbitrarily imposed on them for contempt of court.
-
-The admiral, however, whose approaching end made him more and more
-anxious to have his son at liberty, sent privately and paid both fines,
-thus securing the release of both prisoners. Penn found his father
-greatly changed. The once proud and ambitious man had experienced the
-hollowness of worldly things and longed for death. “I am weary of the
-world,” he said to William shortly before his death. “I would not live
-over another day of my life even if it were possible to bring back the
-past. Its temptations are more terrible than death.” He charged his
-children, all of whom were gathered about him, “Let nothing tempt you to
-wrong your conscience; thus shall you find an inward peace that will
-prove a blessing when evil days befall.”
-
-He talked much with William, who doubtless did not fail to impress upon
-his dying father the comfort of a firm religious faith, and before he
-died expressed his entire approval of the simple form of worship adopted
-by his eldest and favorite son. Sir William died on the sixteenth of
-September, 1670. Shortly before the end he sent messages to the King and
-to the Duke of York with the dying request that they would act as
-guardians to his son, whom he foresaw would stand greatly in need of
-friends and protectors in the trials to which his faith would expose
-him. Wealth he would not lack, for the admiral left an estate yielding
-an annual income of about fifteen hundred pounds, besides a claim on the
-royal exchequer for fifteen thousand pounds, which sum he had loaned at
-various times to the King and his brother.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter III
- Penn’s Third Imprisonment—His Happy Marriage—Fresh Persecutions—Visits
- to Germany—Quaker Emigration
-
-
-After his father’s death Penn became more absorbed than ever in his
-chosen mission of spreading the gospel as interpreted by Fox, which
-seemed to him the only true form of religion. The restraint he had
-hitherto felt obliged to impose on himself in this respect, out of
-deference to his father’s prejudices, was now no longer necessary and he
-was free to follow the dictates of his soul. But he was soon to suffer
-the consequences of having drawn upon himself the displeasure of the
-court by his bold defence during the recent trial, and still more by a
-pamphlet issued soon after his father’s death in which he fearlessly
-denounced the unjust and arbitrary action of the judges not only toward
-the accused, but also toward the jury. Just before the new year of 1671
-Penn was again arrested on the charge of having held unlawful meetings
-and was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment at Newgate, during which
-time he wrote several important works, chiefly urging the necessity of
-liberty of conscience in England.
-
-After his release Penn made a journey to Holland and Germany, whither
-many of the Quakers had fled to escape the continual persecutions to
-which they were subjected in their own country. Others had crossed the
-ocean to seek in America an abode where they could live without
-hinderance according to their convictions, and the letters written by
-these drew large numbers to this land of promise; for in spite of the
-hardships of the voyage thither, the emigrants drew such glowing
-pictures of the beauty and fertility of the country and the happiness of
-enjoying religious worship undisturbed as could not fail to appeal to
-their unfortunate brethren so sorely in need of this blessing.
-
-During his travels Penn had seen many of these letters and heard the
-subject of emigration freely discussed, and gradually he formed a plan
-which indeed had been the dream of his youth, although there had then
-seemed no prospect of its ever being realized. This plan, however, was
-forced into the background for a time by an event of more personal
-importance; namely, his betrothal to Guglielma Maria Springett, daughter
-of Sir William Springett of Sussex, who had greatly distinguished
-himself as a colonel in the parliamentary army and died during the civil
-wars at an early age. His widow and her three children, of whom Guli,
-the youngest, was born shortly after her father’s death, had retired to
-the village of Chalfont in Buckinghamshire, where she afterward married
-Isaac Pennington, one of the most prominent of the early Quakers. It was
-while visiting Friend Pennington at his home in Chalfont that Penn met
-and fell in love with the charming Guli, who willingly consented to
-bestow her hand on this stalwart young friend of her stepfather, whose
-belief she shared. The marriage took place in 1672 and proved one of
-lasting happiness on both sides. Conjugal bliss did not divert Penn from
-his sacred calling, however, for we find him soon on his travels again,
-with his faithful Guli, who accompanied him everywhere until the birth
-of their first child made it no longer possible. This was a son, to whom
-they gave the name of Springett, for his grandfather. But even the joys
-of fatherhood could not confine Penn to his home, now doubly happy. He
-travelled about the country constantly, either alone or with other
-distinguished Friends, and was so active both as a preacher and as a
-writer that he soon became known as the “sword” of the society.
-
-The year 1673 brought fresh persecutions to the Quakers through the
-passage by Parliament of the so-called Test Act, excluding all
-dissenters from holding office of any kind under the crown, which King
-Charles had been forced to sign, much against his will, since it also
-applied to Catholics. As the Quakers were looked upon as among the worst
-enemies of the established church, not only on account of their extreme
-candor and boldness, but also for their contempt of all outward forms of
-worship, their day of trial was not long delayed. George Fox was one of
-the first victims, and in order to secure his release Penn once more
-made his appearance at court after an interval of five years. His
-guardian and protector, the Duke of York, received him most graciously,
-reproached him for his long absence, and promised to use his influence
-with the King in Fox’s behalf. He also agreed to do all in his power to
-put an end to the oppressive persecution of the Friends, and dismissed
-Penn with the assurance that he would be glad to see him at any time or
-be of any service to him. The promised intercession, however, was either
-forgotten or without avail, for the merciless enactments against
-dissenters of all kinds continued as before and filled all the prisons
-in the country. Little wonder that their thoughts turned to emigration,
-in which some of their brethren had already taken refuge. For
-deep-rooted as is the Englishman’s attachment to his native land, even
-patriotism must yield to that inborn love of freedom and the higher
-demand of the spirit for liberty of conscience.
-
-To Penn especially this idea appealed with irresistible force now that
-he had at last given up hope of ever securing these rights in England.
-But whither? Not in Holland or Germany was to be found the longed-for
-freedom. Refugees in those countries were scarcely less oppressed and
-persecuted than at home. It was across the sea that Penn’s thoughts
-flew, to the silent primeval forests of the New World, where no
-tyrannical power yet held sway; where every man was the builder of his
-own fortune and the master of his destiny, unfettered by iron-bound laws
-and customs; where a still virgin Nature, adorned with all the charms of
-a favored clime, invited to direct communion with the Creator of all
-things and inspired a peace of mind impossible to secure elsewhere.
-There was the place to found the commonwealth of which he had dreamed.
-All that as a boy he had heard from his father’s lips of that wondrous
-new Paradise beyond the seas; all that as a youth with his intense
-longing for freedom his fancy had painted of such an ideal community;
-all that as a man he had learned from the letters of emigrants who had
-already reached this land of promise, all this combined to create an
-inspiring vision that ever unfolded fresh beauties to his mind. And
-when, in 1676, Penn was unexpectedly brought into actual contact with
-this country, no doubt it seemed to him like the finger of God pointing
-out to him the land of his dreams.
-
-In that year Charles the Second, who had already disposed of various
-English conquests and possessions in North America, made over to his
-brother James, Duke of York, the province of New Netherlands, ceded to
-him by the Dutch after their defeat in 1665. This was that fertile tract
-of country lying between the Delaware and Connecticut Rivers, where the
-Dutch West Indian Trading Company had already made some settlements. The
-Duke of York kept only a part of this territory, however; that which was
-named for him, New York. The territory between the Hudson and Delaware
-Rivers he gave in fee to two noblemen, Lord Berkeley and Sir George
-Carteret, the latter of whom, having been formerly governor of the
-channel island of Jersey lying off the French coast, called his part New
-Jersey. Both these provinces granted full freedom of government and of
-belief to all sects—a matter not so much of principle perhaps as of
-policy, to attract thither victims of the penal laws in England, for the
-greater the number of colonists who settled in these still sparsely
-populated territories, the more their value and their revenues would
-increase. Nor were these calculations unfounded. Hundreds of Puritans,
-among whom were many Quakers, took advantage of this opportunity to seek
-new homes, and their industry and perseverance soon brought the land to
-a state of most promising productiveness. Finding the care of these
-distant possessions burdensome, however, Lord Berkeley sold his share
-for a thousand pounds to one Edward Billing through his agent John
-Fenwick. Some dispute concerning the matter having arisen between these
-two men, both of whom were Quakers, Penn was chosen to settle the
-controversy and decided in favor of Fenwick, who had emigrated with a
-large party of Friends to the coast of Delaware and founded the town of
-Salem.
-
-Penn’s connection with the American province did not end here. Billing,
-having become embarrassed in his affairs, was forced to resign his
-interest in the territory to his creditors, who at his request appointed
-Penn as one of the administrators. This office, though not altogether
-agreeable to him, he felt obliged to accept in the interest of the many
-Quakers already settled there; but if his model community were to be
-founded there, he must have a free hand and not be hampered by any
-regulations or restrictions which might be made by Sir George Carteret
-as joint owner of the province of New Jersey. He therefore directed his
-efforts to securing a division of the territory, in which he finally
-succeeded, Carteret taking the eastern part, while the western, being
-sold to the highest bidder for the benefit of Billing’s creditors, came
-into the sole possession of the Quakers.
-
-For this new State of West New Jersey, Penn drew up a constitution, the
-chief provision of which was the right of free worship and liberty of
-conscience. The legislative power was placed almost entirely in the
-hands of the people, to be exercised by chosen representatives, while
-all matters of law and justice were intrusted to a judiciary the members
-of which were to serve for a period of not more than two years. Copies
-of this constitution were printed and widely circulated among the
-Quakers, together with a full description of the soil, climate, and
-natural products of the new colony. The result was amazing. Penn’s home,
-then at Worminghurst in Sussex, was literally besieged by would-be
-emigrants seeking for information, in spite of the fact that in these
-published pamphlets he had strongly urged that no one should leave his
-native land without sufficient cause and not merely from idle curiosity
-or love of gain. Two companies were now organized to assist in the work
-of emigration. The first ship carried over two hundred and thirty
-colonists, and two others soon following, it became necessary to
-establish at once a provisional government, consisting of Penn himself
-with three other members chosen from the two companies.
-
-One of the first acts of the settlers, after safe arrival in the New
-World, was to arrive at an amicable understanding with the native tribes
-by paying them a good price for the land they had occupied or claimed
-for their hunting grounds. This was quite a new experience to the
-Indians, who had hitherto met with only violence and robbery from the
-white men—treatment for which they had usually taken bloody revenge.
-They willingly consented, therefore, to bargain with these peaceful
-strangers, so different from any they had yet seen. “You are our
-brothers,” they declared in their broken English,” and we will live with
-you as brothers. There shall be a broad path on which you and we will
-travel together. If an Englishman falls asleep on this pathway the
-Indian shall go softly by and say, ‘He sleeps, disturb him not!’ The
-path shall be made smooth that no foot may stumble upon it.”
-
-It was no small advantage to these early settlers, struggling against
-hardships and privations to make a home in the wilderness, to be at
-peace with the natives and have nothing to fear from their enmity. Often
-indeed, when threatened with want or danger, they were supplied with the
-necessities of life by the grateful Indians, who knew how to value the
-friendship and honesty of their new neighbors.
-
-Thus West New Jersey bade fair to develop into a favorable place for
-Penn to found that ideal Commonwealth of which he had so long dreamed.
-But in the preoccupations of this new enterprise Penn did not lose sight
-of the duties that lay nearest to him. Hearing that the Friends he had
-formerly visited in Holland and Germany were anxious to learn from his
-own lips of the settlement in New Jersey, he decided to make another
-journey to those countries, the more so as it was important to secure
-for the new colony as many as possible of the German artisans, who at
-that time held a high reputation for skill and industry.
-
-Penn was also especially desirous of making the acquaintance of a noble
-lady whom Robert Barclay had first interested in the Quakers and whose
-influence would be of the utmost importance to the members of that
-persecuted sect in Germany. This was the Princess Elizabeth of the
-Rhine, daughter of the Elector Palatine Frederick the Fifth, afterward
-King of Bohemia. She was closely connected with England, her mother
-having been a daughter of King James the First, and was deeply
-interested, therefore, in all that concerned that country. At this time
-she was living at Herford in Westphalia and was distinguished not only
-for her learning, but still more for the benevolence and sincere piety
-that made her the friend and protectress of all persecuted Christians of
-whatever sect. She had learned from Robert Barclay to feel the greatest
-respect and admiration for the Quaker form of belief, and much was hoped
-from her protection.
-
-In 1677, therefore, Penn again sailed for Holland with George Fox,
-Robert Barclay, and George Keith, all prominent members of the Society
-of Friends, in a vessel the captain of which had served under Admiral
-Penn. Rotterdam, Leyden, Haarlem, and Amsterdam were visited in
-succession and large meetings held, there being many Quakers in each of
-these cities. At Amsterdam George Fox was left behind to attend a
-general assembly or conclave, where questions of importance to the
-Society were to be settled, while Penn and his other two companions went
-on to Herford. They were most kindly received by the Princess Elizabeth,
-who not only permitted them to hold several public meetings, but also
-invited them frequently to her own apartments for religious converse,
-owing to which she finally became a member of the sect herself.
-
-Robert Barclay now returned to Amsterdam to join Fox, but Penn,
-accompanied by Keith, who was almost as proficient as himself in the
-German language, journeyed on by way of Paderborn and Cassel to
-Frankfort-on-the-Main, where Penn preached with great effect, winning
-over many influential persons to his own belief. From Frankfort the two
-Quaker apostles went up along the Rhine to Griesheim near Worms, where a
-small Quaker community had been formed. Here Penn’s plan for founding a
-trans-atlantic State for the free worship of their religion was received
-with the greatest enthusiasm, and large numbers did indeed afterward
-emigrate to New Jersey, where they took an important place in the
-colony, being among the first to condemn and abolish the slavery then
-existing in America, and established a reputation for German worth and
-integrity beyond the seas.
-
-On his return to Cologne, Penn found a letter from the Princess
-Elizabeth urging him to go to Mühlheim to visit the Countess of
-Falkenstein, of whose piety she had already told him. In endeavoring to
-carry out this request of his royal patroness, however, Penn and his
-friend met with a misadventure. At the gates of the castle they
-encountered the Countess’ father, a rough, harsh man with small respect
-for religion of any sort. He roundly abused them for not taking off
-their hats to him, and on learning that they were Quakers, he had them
-taken into custody and escorted beyond the boundaries of his estates by
-a guard. Here they were left alone in the darkness, at the edge of a
-great forest, not knowing where they were or which way to turn. After
-much wandering about they finally reached the town of Duisburg, but the
-gates were closed and in spite of the lateness of the season they were
-forced to remain outside till morning.
-
-From Amsterdam Penn went to join Fox again at Friesland, improving this
-opportunity to make another satisfactory visit to Herford, and parting
-from the noble Princess as a warm friend with whom he afterward enjoyed
-a frequent correspondence. Not till early in the winter did the four
-friends return to England, and the stormy passage, together with his
-nocturnal adventure at Duisburg, so affected Penn’s health that for some
-time he was obliged to submit himself to the care of his devoted wife,
-especially as the importunities of prospective emigrants gave him little
-chance to recuperate.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IV
- The Popish Plot—Settlement of Virginia—The Royal Cession to
- Penn—Christening of Pennsylvania—Outlines of Penn’s Constitution
-
-
-The year 1678 seemingly opened with brighter prospects for those who had
-suffered so severely in the past for their religious beliefs. The
-clearest sighted members of Parliament must have realized the detriment
-to England when such numbers of peaceable citizens, blameless in every
-respect save for their form of worship, were forced to abandon their
-native land, taking with them their possessions and their industries,
-and must have realized that such persecutions must end.
-
-Penn, in spite of being a Quaker, had won the esteem of all classes by
-his high character and his ability and enjoyed the confidence of some of
-the most influential personages in the kingdom. Hearing of this change
-of attitude adopted by Parliament, he laid aside for the time being all
-thoughts of his transatlantic commonwealth and gave himself up to the
-work of securing recognition of his great principle of liberty of
-conscience. Profiting by the favor in which he stood with the Duke of
-York, he endeavored to obtain through him the submission to Parliament
-of an Act of Toleration. The Duke looked favorably on the plan, but
-being himself a member of the Church of Rome, maintained that such a law
-should not be restricted to Protestant dissenters only, but apply also
-to Catholics. All seemed to be going well and Penn’s efforts bade fair
-to be crowned with success, when suddenly an event occurred which
-deferred for years the passage of this act and added fresh fuel to the
-fires of persecution. This was the invention of the famous Popish Plot
-by an infamous wretch named Titus Oates. Formerly a clergyman in the
-Anglican Church, he had been deprived of his living because of his
-shameful excesses and fled to Spain, where he joined the Jesuits.
-Expelled from this order also for improper conduct, he revenged himself
-by turning informer and swore to the existence of a conspiracy among the
-Jesuits to massacre all the prominent Protestants and establish the
-Catholic religion in England. Even the King, for permitting the
-persecution of Catholics in his kingdom, was not to be spared, nor the
-Duke of York, who was not credited with much real devotion to that
-faith.
-
-It is doubtful whether there ever was any real foundation for this
-atrocious charge based by Oates upon letters and papers intrusted to him
-by the Jesuits and which he had opened from curiosity. Nevertheless the
-story was generally credited in spite of the absurdity of the statements
-of such a worthless wretch, and aroused the wildest excitement
-throughout the country, in consequence of which the established church,
-alarmed for its safety, enforced more rigorously than ever the edicts
-against all dissenters. Seeing his hopes of religious freedom in England
-once more fading, Penn bent his efforts the more resolutely toward the
-establishment of a haven in America. He had long ago decided the
-principles by which his new commonwealth was to be governed; namely, the
-equality of all men in the eyes of the law, full liberty of conscience
-and the free worship of religion, self-government by the people, and the
-inviolability of personal liberty as well as of personal property—a form
-of government which, if justly and conscientiously carried out, must
-create indeed an ideal community such as the world had never yet seen.
-Nor was it an impossibility, as was proved by the gratifying success of
-the New Jersey colony, where a part of these principles, at least, had
-already been put into practice.
-
-But where was this model State to be founded? It must be on virgin soil,
-where no government of any kind already existed, and where the new ideas
-could be instituted from the beginning. As the most suitable spot for
-this purpose Penn’s glance had fixed upon a tract of land lying west of
-New Jersey and north of the royal province of Maryland, which had been
-founded in 1632 by a Catholic nobleman, Lord Baltimore, as a refuge for
-persecuted members of his own faith, but which also offered liberty to
-those of other sects. The only occupants of this territory were a few
-scattered Dutch and Swedish settlers, but they were so small in number
-and so widely separated that they need scarcely be taken into
-consideration as possible obstacles to Penn’s plans after the arrival of
-the class of colonists he favored in numbers sufficient to populate this
-wide extent of land. For the rest the country was still an unbroken
-wilderness, where one could wander for days hearing no sound but the
-songs of the countless birds that filled the vast forests. As to the
-natives, in spite of their undeniable cruelty and savage cunning when
-provoked or wronged, it was quite possible to make friends and allies of
-them by kindness and fair treatment, as the New Jersey settlers had
-already learned.
-
-This was the territory of which Penn now determined to secure possession
-if possible, a task which promised no great difficulty, as the English
-crown claimed sovereignty over all that portion of North America lying
-between the thirty-fourth and the forty-fifth degrees north latitude, on
-the strength of the discovery of its coast line by English navigators.
-King James the First had given a patent for part of these possessions to
-an English company, the grant including all the land from the Atlantic
-to the Pacific, and some attempt had been made to found colonies and
-develop the riches of the country, but later this company was divided
-into two, one taking the northern portion, the other the southern. This
-latter, called the London Company, lost no time in fitting up a ship
-which entered Chesapeake Bay in 1607, sailed up the James River, and
-landed its passengers at what was afterward called Jamestown, the first
-English colony in America. These colonists were soon followed by others,
-and by the year 1621 the settlement had so increased that the London
-Company, which had retained the right of ownership, exercised through a
-governor, granted a written constitution to the province, which they
-named Virginia. In 1624, however, this company, having some disagreement
-with King James, was dissolved and Virginia became the property of the
-crown. This being followed by the voluntary withdrawal of the parties
-owning the northern half of the territory, the tract between the
-fortieth and forty-eighth degrees, known as New England, was then deeded
-by James to the Plymouth Company, which made no attempt at colonization
-itself, but sold land to others, part of which thus came into possession
-of the Puritan emigrants.
-
-In 1639, however, during the reign of Charles the First, their charter
-expired and the lands still belonging to them, including what were
-afterward the States of Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey, again
-reverted to the crown. The district lying between the Delaware and
-Hudson Rivers had been claimed by the Dutch—Hudson, the English
-navigator who discovered it, having been then in the service of Holland;
-and here between Delaware Bay and the Connecticut River they had founded
-their colony of New Netherlands. In 1655 the adjoining territory on the
-west bank of the Delaware, comprising the present State of Delaware and
-the southern part of Pennsylvania, had been bought from the Indians by a
-Swedish trading company at the instigation of King Gustavus Adolphus and
-a settlement founded under the name of New Sweden. Not proving the
-commercial success hoped for, this was afterward abandoned. England’s
-acquisition of New Netherlands as the prize of her naval victories over
-Holland, the formation of the colonies of New York and New Jersey, the
-possession of the latter by the Quakers and the drafting of its
-constitution by William Penn,—all these have been related in the
-preceding chapter.
-
-The territory which Penn now had in mind, therefore, had belonged to the
-crown since the dissolution of the Plymouth Company and was again at the
-disposal of the King. As to Penn’s confidence in his ability to obtain
-possession of it without difficulty, it will be remembered that he had
-inherited from his father a claim of fifteen thousand pounds against the
-royal exchequer. As neither the King nor the Duke of York were able to
-repay this sum, the unpaid interest on which, during the ten years since
-the admiral’s death, amounted to more than a thousand pounds, Penn felt
-sure the King would welcome a proposal to cede this tract of land in
-America as payment of his claim—certainly a simple method of releasing
-himself from this large debt.
-
-But the affair was not to be so easily settled after all, for the time
-was past when the sovereign had absolute power to dispose of crown
-possessions as he would, the privy council now having a voice in the
-matter, and to obtain their consent was difficult, Penn’s ideas in
-regard to the government of this new State being regarded not only as
-preposterous, but also as dangerous to itself and to the crown. He was
-urged, therefore, by his friends to make no mention of his real purpose
-in his petition to the King, lest he be forced to renounce his
-long-cherished plan. Although he accepted this prudent advice, there
-were still many obstacles to overcome, owing to the difficulty of
-defining any exact boundaries in that trackless wilderness and the
-precautions necessary to incorporate in the patent all possible security
-for the maintenance of crown prerogatives.
-
-While the matter was still before the council and the result by no means
-certain, Penn took advantage of an opportunity which offered itself of
-becoming a joint owner of New Jersey, by which, even should his petition
-be refused, his plans could still be carried out in that province, if
-only on a small scale. Sir George Carteret, tired of his colonial
-possessions, offered to sell his ownership, and Penn, with a number of
-others, concluded the purchase. Again the public confidence in him and
-his enterprises was shown by the haste with which hundreds of families,
-especially from Scotland, took advantage of the liberal terms offered to
-emigrants in his published prospectus and enrolled their names as future
-colonists. At length, after much deliberation, and owing largely to the
-influence of the Duke of York, to whom Penn had again applied for
-assistance, the council agreed to comply with his proposal, partly also,
-perhaps, from the fear that in case they refused Penn might insist upon
-the payment of his debt, for which at the moment no means were
-available.
-
-On the twenty-fourth of February, 1681, the King signed the deed
-granting to Penn the absolute ownership of all that territory extending
-from the Delaware River to Ohio on the west and as far as Lake Erie on
-the north, covering an area equal to the whole of England, and the fifth
-of March, at a special meeting of the privy council, this patent was
-delivered to Penn in the presence of the King. As evidence of His
-Majesty’s high good-humor on this occasion, a popular anecdote is told.
-As Penn, according to the Quaker custom, neither took off his hat on the
-King’s entrance nor made the usual obeisance, Charles quietly removed
-his own hat, although it was the royal prerogative to remain covered on
-entering an assembly of any kind. To Penn’s astonished query as to the
-reason for this unusual proceeding he replied smilingly, “It is the
-custom at court for only one person to remain covered.”
-
-Another proof of the King’s satisfaction at thus being freed from his
-indebtedness to Penn was shown in choosing a name for the new province.
-Penn at first suggested New Wales, on account of the mountainous
-character of the country, but one of the councillors, who was a Welshman
-and none too well disposed toward the Friends, objected to the idea of
-giving the name of his native land to an American Quaker colony. His new
-domain being as thickly wooded as it was hilly, Penn then proposed
-Sylvania, which met with general approval, the King, however, insisting
-that Penn’s own name should be placed before it, making Pennsylvania or
-“Penn’s woodland.” In vain he protested that this would be looked on as
-vanity in him. Charles would hear of no denial, declaring good-naturedly
-that he would take the whole responsibility on himself. The name of
-Pennsylvania was inserted in the patent, and Pennsylvania it remained.
-
-This document is still in existence, carefully preserved among the State
-archives. It is written in old English script on a roll of stout
-parchment, each line underscored with red ink and the margins adorned
-with drawings, the first page bearing the head of King Charles the
-Second. It was a proud and joyful moment for Penn when he received this
-deed from the King’s hand, marking the first and most important step
-toward the realization of his dreams. “It is a gift from God,” he
-declared reverently. “He will bless it and make it the seed of a great
-nation.”
-
-The patent conferred upon the new owner the right to divide the province
-into counties and municipalities; to incorporate towns and boroughs; to
-make laws with the people’s consent; to impose taxes for public
-purposes; to muster troops for the defence of the State, and to execute
-the death sentence according to martial law—all on condition that no
-laws should be made in opposition to those existing in England, that the
-royal impost on all articles of commerce should be lawfully paid and
-allegiance to the crown duly observed. In case of failure to comply with
-these conditions the King reserved the right to assume control of
-Pennsylvania in his own person until he should be indemnified to the
-full value of the land. Parliament also reserved the right to impose
-taxes on the colonists. By the express desire of the Bishop of London it
-was stipulated that should twenty or more of the inhabitants of the
-province desire the services of a clergyman of the established church,
-he should be permitted to dwell among them unmolested. Lastly, Penn, the
-owner, in recognition that the land was held in fee of the English
-crown, was to pay an annual tribute to the King of England of two
-bear-skins, with the fifth part of all gold and silver found in
-Pennsylvania at any time.
-
-Penn set to work at once upon the task of drawing up a constitution for
-his new colony, “with reverence before God and good-will toward men,” as
-he states in the introduction to this instrument. The sovereign power
-was to be exercised by the governor, Penn himself, jointly with the
-citizens of the commonwealth. For legislative purposes a council of
-seventy-two was to be chosen by the people, one-third of which number
-was to retire at the end of every year and be replaced by others
-selected in the same way. This council was to frame laws and superintend
-their execution; to maintain the peace and security of the province; to
-promote commerce by the building of roads, trading posts, and harbors;
-to regulate the finances; to establish schools and courts of justice and
-generally do all that should be required to promote the welfare of the
-colony. The only prerogative claimed by Penn for himself was that he and
-his lawful heirs and successors should remain at the head of this
-council and have the right of three votes instead of one.
-
-In addition to the council of state there was to be an assembly which at
-first was to include all free citizens of the State, but later, when
-their number became too large, to consist of not more than five hundred
-members, to be chosen annually. All laws made by the council must be
-submitted for approval or rejection to this assembly, which also had the
-right to select candidates for public offices, of whom at least half
-must be accepted by the governor.
-
-These were the outlines of Penn’s masterly scheme of government, to
-which were added some forty provisional laws to remain in force until
-such time as a council of state could be chosen. These included entire
-freedom of religious belief and worship, any molester of which was to be
-punished as a disturber of the peace, and the prohibition of all
-theatrical performances, games of chance, drinking bouts, sports that
-involved bloodshed or the torture of animals—all, in short, that could
-encourage cruelty, idleness, or godlessness. Prisoners must work to earn
-their support. Thieves must refund double the amount stolen or work in
-prison until the sum was made up, and all children above the age of
-twelve years must be taught some useful trade or occupation to prevent
-idleness. Many of these provisional laws and regulations have remained
-permanently in force in Pennsylvania, the council being unable to
-substitute anything better, and their wisdom has been amply proved by
-the experience of more than two hundred years.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter V
- Description of Penn’s Domain—Negotiations with the Indians by Penn’s
-Agent—Death of Penn’s Mother—Final Instructions to his Family—Departure
- of the Welcome
-
-
-This newly acquired territory, which was henceforth to absorb all Penn’s
-attention, lay to the north of Maryland and west of New Jersey, of which
-Penn was now joint owner, reaching from the Delaware River on the east
-to the Ohio on the west, and north as far as Lake Erie. The eastern and
-western boundaries were well defined by these two rivers, but on the
-north and south the lines had yet to be agreed upon with the owners of
-the adjoining colonies—no easy matter where the land was largely
-primeval forest, untrodden by human foot save for the Indians who
-traversed it on their hunting expeditions. The greater part of the tract
-was occupied by the various ranges of the Allegheny Mountains, whose
-bare rocky peaks offered no very inviting prospect and held out few
-hopes as to a favorable climate. But wherever trees could find
-nourishment for their roots, dense forests extended, untouched as yet by
-any axe, while verdant meadows lined the countless streams that
-descended from the mountain heights to empty their waters into the
-Allegheny and Susquehanna Rivers which flowed through the middle of the
-State. The only outlet to the ocean was through the Delaware River,
-which opened into Delaware Bay, where there was a good harbor.
-
-The climate of the country was a diversified one. While in the mountain
-regions the winters were severe, the eastern slopes toward the Atlantic
-Ocean, as well as those in the northwest toward the Ohio River and Lake
-Erie, enjoyed a temperate climate with often great heat in the summer.
-In these regions the soil was rich and fruitful, promising bountiful
-returns to the settler after he had once succeeded in clearing the land
-and making room for the plough. The forests, almost impenetrable in
-places with masses of sumach bushes and climbing vines, furnished almost
-every kind of wood already known to the English colonists: cedar,
-cypress, pine, and sycamore, as well as the full-blooming tulip tree,
-which flourished in sheltered spots. Game of all sorts abounded and the
-streams were full of fish. The most delicious grapes and peaches,
-chestnuts and mulberries grew wild in protected places, and flowers of
-tropical gorgeousness greeted the eyes of astonished settlers. The gold
-and silver of which King Charles had been so careful to reserve a share
-were not found in the province, but there was plenty of iron and an
-inexhaustible supply of the finest coal. Also there were valuable salt
-springs, as well as those useful materials, lime, slate, and building
-stone. In short, it was a country well fitted to supply every need of
-the settler and offering magnificent prospects for the future.
-
-To be sure, it was inhabited by several tribes of Indians, chief of
-which were the Lenni Lennapes in the southern part and the Iroquois in
-the northern, but if they were disposed at first to regard with
-suspicion this invasion of their domains, they soon found the newcomers
-fair and honest in their dealings with them and willing to pay for the
-right to settle there, like the New Jersey colonists. Indeed these
-semi-savage natives seemed to place little value on the permanent
-possession of the land over which they claimed sovereignty. They had no
-fixed abiding place, but roamed about at will, settling down for a time
-where the hunting was especially good or the streams promised to fill
-their nets with fish. So long as they were free to hunt and fish as they
-chose and their women had a small piece of open ground in which to
-prepare the maize cakes that served them for bread, no hostile attacks
-were to be feared from them.
-
-Penn himself little suspected that he had received an empire in exchange
-for his claim against the crown, nor did he realize as long as he lived
-the full value of his newly acquired territory. The idea of enriching
-himself or his family was as far from his thoughts as it had been close
-to his father’s. With him it was purely a question of obtaining a home
-for his ideal Commonwealth, and he refused all the offers to purchase
-rights of trade there that poured in upon him as soon as the patent had
-been granted, even though he was in great need of money at the time and
-although the sale of such rights was not only perfectly legitimate, but
-no more than any other in his position would have done without
-hesitation. One merchant, for instance, offered him six thousand pounds,
-besides two and a half per cent of the yearly profits, for the exclusive
-right to trade in beaver hats between the Delaware and Susquehanna
-Rivers. Penn was resolved that trade in his colony should be no more
-restricted than personal liberty or freedom of conscience, and the more
-widely his principles of government became known, the larger grew the
-number of would-be emigrants who wished to settle there. He soon found
-himself so overrun with agents wishing to consult him as to the sale of
-lands or the formation of trading companies that he scarcely knew which
-way to turn. There was hardly a city in the three kingdoms that did not
-send messengers or petitions, while offers came even from Holland and
-Germany, where Penn was so well known.
-
-Emigration companies were also formed for the foundation of settlements
-on a larger scale. To one of these, in Frankfort-on-the-Main, Penn
-deeded a tract of fifteen thousand acres along the banks of a navigable
-river, with three hundred acres in the interior on which to found the
-capital of the new State. A trading company in Bristol concluded a
-contract for the purchase of twenty thousand acres and set to work at
-once to fit out a ship, while in London, Liverpool, and Bristol
-emigrants gathered in such numbers that Penn soon had no fear as to the
-settlement of his colony. Among these, it is true, were many adventurers
-in search of a fortune only, which they hoped to make more quickly and
-easily under Penn’s form of government than elsewhere. But by far the
-greater number were victims of oppression, seeking to escape the endless
-persecutions to which they were subjected at home on account of their
-religious opinions, and taking with them little but good resolution and
-a pair of useful hands.
-
-Immediately on receiving the patent Penn despatched his cousin, Colonel
-Markham, with three ships to take possession of the new province in his
-name, to arrange with Lord Baltimore as to the doubtful boundary lines
-on the south, and above all to make friends with the Indians by
-concluding a formal treaty with them for the purchase of such lands as
-they laid claim to. The kindliness of his nature made it impossible for
-him to treat the unfortunate natives as other Europeans had done,
-driving them ruthlessly from their own hunting grounds wherever the land
-was worth taking possession of and forcing them as far as possible into
-slavery. The Spanish explorers especially, in their insatiable thirst
-for gold, had even robbed them of all the precious metals and pearls
-they had and endeavored by the most shameful cruelty to extort from them
-knowledge of the location where they found the gold of which their
-ornaments were made. If they offered the slightest resistance or took up
-arms to defend themselves or regain their liberty, they were hunted like
-wild beasts by bloodhounds trained for that purpose, or fell in heaps
-before the murderous bullets against which their arrows were of no
-avail. Even the Puritan settlers of New England, who should have
-practised the Christian virtues of justice and humanity, were guilty of
-many acts of cruelty and treachery toward the red men, with whom they
-were perpetually at warfare in consequence.
-
-Penn hoped, by the use of gentler methods, to win the confidence of the
-Indians, who must have already discovered from the New Jersey settlers
-that all white men were by no means like those with whom they had first
-come in contact. It was necessary, in fact, if his colony were to enjoy
-permanent peace and security, and in spite of the ridicule which such
-humane ideas was likely to evoke, Markham was charged with the strictest
-instructions in this regard. He was a bold and determined man, devoted
-to his kinsman Penn, the wisdom and purity of whose ideas he fully
-appreciated in spite of his soldierly training. On his arrival in
-Pennsylvania he lost no time in concluding a treaty with the chiefs or
-sachems of the principal tribes, conveying to Penn for a fixed sum all
-lands claimed by them with the solemn assurance in his name that no
-settler should ever molest or injure them. The next two ships which came
-over from England brought three agents authorized to make further
-treaties of peace and friendship, thus strengthening the work begun by
-Markham, and also an address written by Penn himself to be read to the
-Indians, expressing it as his earnest wish “by their favor and consent,
-so to govern the land that they might always live together as friends
-and allies.”
-
-Markham was less fortunate, however, in his negotiations with Lord
-Baltimore concerning the doubtful boundary lines, which, if not
-definitely fixed, were likely to prove a source of much contention. The
-existence of a Quaker colony adjoining his own province was by no means
-pleasing to the Catholic nobleman, who, if left to himself, would have
-done all in his power to prevent its foundation. The matter was only
-settled by the King’s personal interference in Penn’s behalf, and then
-only a temporary decision was arrived at, the Duke of York’s influence
-having finally to be brought to bear before everything could be arranged
-satisfactorily for the future prosperity of the new State. Pennsylvania,
-as already mentioned, had but one direct outlet to the Atlantic Ocean.
-Should this be cut off or obstructed at any time by enemies, it would be
-ruinous to the trade of the colony. Penn therefore determined to acquire
-if possible a strip of land forming the west shore of Delaware Bay on
-the peninsula extending between Delaware and Chesapeake Bays, the
-possession of which was indispensable for the protection of
-Pennsylvania’s trading vessels. After much negotiation this was
-accomplished with the Duke of York’s aid and the sovereign rights to
-this piece of coast granted to Penn and his heirs forever. This removed
-the last obstacle to his undisputed possession of the new territory and
-its successful development, and he was now free to cross the Atlantic
-and assume the government in person.
-
-Just at this time, however, a great misfortune befell him in the sudden
-death of his mother, that tender guardian of his childhood, friend and
-mediator of his troubled youth, and devoted sharer of the hopes and
-plans of his manhood, whose support and sympathy had never failed him.
-So overwhelmed with grief was he by this loss that for a time his health
-was seriously affected and it was many weeks before he recovered his
-peace of mind. This sad event also added to Penn’s difficulties. Being
-unwilling to take his wife and children with him on this first voyage,
-he had hoped to leave them under his mother’s wise and experienced
-guardianship, in which case he could have parted from them with good
-heart, feeling sure that all would be well during his absence. This was
-now no longer possible, however, and another anxiety was added to his
-load.
-
-In these days of swift and luxuriously appointed steamships, when the
-voyage from Europe to America is so quickly and comfortably made, it
-seems strange to think of regarding it with so much anxiety and
-apprehension; but in Penn’s time steamships were unknown and travellers
-had to depend on clumsy sailing vessels, entirely at the mercy of the
-winds, while the passage, now made easily in from five to seven days,
-then required at least six weeks, and sometimes, with contrary winds,
-double that. And aside from the dangers of such a sea voyage, what
-unknown experiences awaited them in that distant land, where homes must
-be hewed out from the wilderness, where privation and hardships of every
-sort must be endured, where death indeed by Indian tomahawk or knife was
-possible at any moment! Under these circumstances even so brave and
-resolute a man as William Penn might well feel anxiety over such a
-voyage and its outcome. For a time he did think of taking with him the
-wife and children from whom he found it so hard to part, that he might
-watch over them himself; but the giant task awaiting him beyond the sea
-claimed all his mind and strength and he feared the care of a family at
-such a time might defeat the whole purpose of his journey, to say
-nothing of his dread of exposing them to the dangers and uncertainties
-of a life of which he had heard more than enough from those who had
-already experienced it. But Penn had firm faith in God and in the
-righteousness of a cause which aimed not at personal gain but the bodily
-and spiritual welfare of thousands, and which if it succeeded must
-result in the creation of a veritable earthly Paradise. He therefore did
-all that lay in his power to further it and left the issue in the hands
-of Providence.
-
-Before leaving he made a sort of testament containing his parting
-instruction’s to his dear ones, to be kept ever before their eyes. In
-this he laid particular stress on the proper education of his children,
-who, if all went well, would one day be called to govern the State of
-Pennsylvania, and charged his wife to live as economically as possible
-in other respects, but to spare nothing to this end. The two sons,
-Springett and William, were to be thoroughly grounded in all branches of
-knowledge necessary to their future position, especially in agriculture,
-shipbuilding, surveying, and navigation. The only daughter, Letty or
-Letitia, was to receive also a suitable training in all domestic
-affairs. Above all, they were to be taught piety and the fear of God and
-to strive with all their strength to attain these virtues. “Let your
-hearts be righteous before the Lord and put your trust in Him,” he
-concluded; “then no one will have power to harm or injure you.”
-
-Autumn was already approaching before the _Welcome_, which was to carry
-Penn across the ocean, was ready to set sail. It was a fine vessel of
-three hundred tons and larger than most ships crossing the Atlantic in
-those days, but even its capacity was taxed to the utmost, for more than
-a hundred colonists, mostly of the wealthier class, were eager to make
-the voyage with the owner of the new province, and each had to carry
-sufficient provisions to last possibly for twelve or fourteen weeks.
-Even then many who had been accustomed to a life of ease and luxury were
-forced to content themselves with scanty rations lest the supply give
-out. The quantity of luggage of all sorts required by so many persons
-was also no small matter, although no one was allowed to carry any
-material for house fittings, such as doors or windows, but Penn himself,
-who also took with him a horse. The hold of the ship was full and even
-the deck lined with chests and boxes when at last, on the first of
-September, 1682, the _Welcome_ was ready to start on her journey. As
-soon as Penn had come on board after parting with his family, the anchor
-was lifted and the good ship sailed away from Deal, followed by the
-prayers and benedictions of thousands.
-
-It was already late in the season and a dangerous, trying winter voyage
-was before them, should the passage prove a long one. The winds were
-fair, however, and all promised well, when the alarming discovery was
-made that an unmarked and unwelcome guest was on board; namely, the
-smallpox, one of the worst diseases that could have broken out, since on
-a crowded vessel it was impossible to prevent infection by isolating the
-patients. At first the epidemic seemed so mild it was not thought
-necessary to turn back, but it gradually grew more and more malignant
-and raged to such an extent that for three weeks deaths were of daily
-occurrence and more than half of the ship’s company were swept away.
-There was no physician of any kind on board, but Penn labored heroically
-to relieve the sufferers, placing all his supplies at their disposal,
-watching by their bedsides, and endeavoring to banish by the word of God
-the deadly fear that accompanies contagious diseases. But it was of no
-avail. Day after day death continued to claim its toll. After the
-horrors of such an experience, it may be imagined with what joy and
-rapture the first sight of the shores of America was hailed by those who
-had survived that terrible nine weeks’ voyage.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VI
- Penn’s Arrival—The Founding of Philadelphia—First General
- Assembly—Building of the “Blue Anchor”—The First School and Printing
- Press
-
-
-On the twenty-seventh of October the _Welcome_ cast anchor before
-Newcastle, a small village on the strip of land granted to Penn by the
-Duke of York. News of the arrival of the vessel quickly spread and the
-entire population, young and old, regardless of nationality, flocked to
-welcome the long-expected governor. English, Scotch, and Irish stood
-side by side with the stolid German, the clumsy Hollander, and the
-fair-haired Swede, all eager to behold at last the man in whose hands
-lay the moulding of their future. The native children of the wilderness
-in their strange dress, with high fringed moccasins, an eagle or heron’s
-feather thrust through the head band, bow in hand, a quiver of feathered
-arrows fastened to the shoulder, also flocked to meet him. Who can say
-which gazed with keener interest on the approaching ship flying a great
-English flag from her masthead, the white men, who had some idea of what
-to expect from the newcomer, or the redskins, who in spite of their
-apparently calm indifference must have been inwardly consumed with
-curiosity to see what sort of man it was in whose name and by whose
-orders they had met with treatment so different from any that had
-hitherto been accorded them by white men. Certainly nothing but
-good-will could have been read in the noble features and the earnest,
-kindly gaze of the dignified-looking man who now disembarked from the
-vessel, distinguished only from his companions by the broad blue scarf
-he wore. As he stepped ashore on the landing stage and received the
-greetings of his cousin, Markham, a deafening shout burst from the
-assembled throng. Deeply moved, Penn bowed in acknowledgment of the
-tribute, and through the tears that glittered in his eyes shone the
-resolve to merit the confidence so spontaneously expressed.
-
-The following day, after he had somewhat recovered from the long and
-trying voyage, a meeting of the people was held in the town-hall and the
-legal documents pertaining to the transfer of the tract were read aloud,
-after which a deputy of the Duke of York handed to Penn, in the name of
-his master, a flask of water and a small basketful of earth in token
-that the land had been actually delivered over to him. The new owner
-then arose and in his deep rich voice addressed the assembly, which
-listened in breathless silence to his words. He told how from early
-youth it had been his dream to found somewhere a free State to be
-governed by the people, where full liberty of conscience could be
-enjoyed and the Christian virtues flourish. He explained the principles
-according to which he had drawn up the constitution for Pennsylvania,
-and promised that the same laws should be followed in the administration
-of this additional territory which had been granted to him, assuring the
-people that the chief power should be exercised by himself only until
-the new constitution could be put into force, during which time he would
-endeavor to wield it to the best of his ability for the public good.
-Lastly he retained all existing officials in their positions as proof
-that he harbored no prejudices and was disposed to deal fairly in all
-particulars.
-
-When he had finished speaking a rousing cheer testified to the approval
-of his audience and he was unanimously urged to retain the governorship
-of the new territory, making it a part of Pennsylvania. This he promised
-to take into consideration, leaving the matter to be decided at the next
-assembly, which was to be held at Upland, a settlement made by the
-Swedes in Delaware, and up to this time the most important town in that
-region. This was now Penn’s destination, and as he sailed up the
-Delaware River his heart must have thrilled with delight at the fresh
-beauties revealed by each curve of the winding stream, until at last the
-settlement was reached and he stepped ashore on his own dominions, his
-Pennsylvania. The spot where Penn first landed is still shown, marked by
-a solitary pine tree.
-
-Here, too, his arrival was hailed with general rejoicing. Those who had
-preceded him to America with Markham and done all in their power to
-carry out his plans looked anxiously for his coming to better their
-situation, which truly was in need of improvement. They had been
-received in the most friendly way, it is true, by the Swedish settlers,
-who had given them all the assistance possible, but their hospitality
-was unable to afford shelter for all. A few, whose means permitted, had
-managed to bring over with them enough lumber to build a small house at
-once, but the majority were forced to live in tents or huts made from
-clay and the branches of trees, neither of which offered much protection
-against the severe weather of the winter months. Some had even made use
-of the caves hollowed out from the high banks of the Delaware by the
-Indians in former times or dug new ones for themselves, finding them a
-better shelter than any other available. It was in one of these caves
-that the first birth in the settlement occurred, and the child, who was
-named John Key, received from Penn the gift of a building site in the
-new town he had planned.
-
-His first care was to establish a permanent location for the colonists
-who had come over with him before they should scatter in search of
-homes, as the previous ones had done, regardless of any definite plan.
-Markham was in favor of using Upland, or Chester as Penn now called it,
-as the nucleus of the future city. But Penn had made a better choice, in
-which he was supported by Thomas Holme, an experienced surveyor whom he
-had sent out from England and who had already thoroughly explored the
-surrounding country. A more favorable spot for the location of a great
-commercial centre could scarcely have been found than the one thus
-selected. It was at the junction of the Schuylkill and Delaware Rivers,
-where the high banks of the latter ensured a safe harbor, while near by
-Holme had discovered quarries containing an inexhaustible supply of the
-finest building stone, which would make the construction of houses a
-comparatively simple matter. Penn lost no time in purchasing this land
-from the three Swedes to whom it belonged and set to work at once with
-the assistance of Thomas Holme to draw up plans for laying out the new
-city, which was to receive the name of Philadelphia, signifying
-“brotherly love.” This being the ruling principle on which his State was
-founded, he wished it to attract thither all who had suffered so
-bitterly from the lack of brotherly love in religious matters. Before a
-single one of the trees that covered the spot was felled, before a
-single foundation stone was laid, the plan of the whole city was already
-clear in Penn’s mind and the enterprising Holme began at once to lay out
-its streets and public squares. An additional tract of about two square
-miles was also purchased, so that these might be of ample width and size
-to afford the future inhabitants plenty of space and air, while the
-building lots were to be large enough to permit every house to be
-surrounded by a garden, thus giving the city the appearance, as Penn
-expressed it, of a green country village.
-
-His next act was to summon a general assembly of the people, at which
-were also present delegates from those settlements on Delaware Bay which
-were anxious to join Penn’s Commonwealth, a desire which was granted,
-the assembly unanimously agreeing to the union of the two territories.
-The constitution drawn up by Penn was accepted almost without a change,
-and to the forty provisional laws were added twenty-one more, made
-necessary by the special requirements of the new State. In three days
-the whole work of legislation was completed, a proof of the unanimity of
-opinion that existed among these enthusiasts drawn thither by the same
-desire, that of finding an asylum where they could live undisturbed in
-the enjoyment of their religious convictions. Once this blessing was
-secured, they willingly submitted to laws and regulations that may not
-have been altogether in accordance with their own ideas, as indeed could
-scarcely have been expected among people of so many different
-nationalities and traditions. This matter settled, Penn now made a
-series of visits to his neighbors the governors of New York, Maryland,
-and New Jersey, hoping by a personal interview with Lord Baltimore to
-arrive at some settlement of the troublesome boundary question, but
-failing in this he returned to his own colony, where there was abundance
-of work for him.
-
-After Penn’s departure from England, hundreds who had hitherto hesitated
-decided at once to follow him. During the Spring of 1683 twenty-three
-ships came sailing up the Delaware River, filled with colonists for whom
-it was necessary to provide quarters that they might lose no time in
-making a home for themselves while the favorable season lasted. This
-task was made somewhat easier now, as the indefatigable Holme had
-already explored the whole State and divided it into counties. In order
-that all might have an equal chance, Penn had the land sold at public
-auction. Prices were absurdly low, averaging threepence an acre, with an
-additional rental of one shilling on every hundred acres, which was to
-form a sort of State revenue for the governor. When it is remembered
-that Penn had not only paid the English government for the land
-originally, even though a comparatively small sum, but had also bought
-it again from the Indians, whose right of possession seemed to him far
-more well founded than that of the English crown, this rental seems a
-poor compensation, and he can hardly be blamed for afterward reserving a
-considerable estate for himself and his children, especially as he also
-made a handsome provision both for the Duke of York and for his friend
-and co-worker George Fox. The colonists now found themselves in the
-midst of stirring times, especially in the region of the new town,
-Philadelphia. Alloted building sites were cleared of trees and all who
-could work were pressed into service to secure as soon as possible a
-better shelter against the weather than was afforded by the tents or
-temporary huts already erected. Even delicate women unused to manual
-labor of any kind helped their fathers or husbands in the fields as they
-could, cooked, carried wood and water, and cared for the cows they had
-brought with them from England, some even sawing wood or carrying mortar
-for building. If strength or courage failed, it was restored and hearts
-and hands again strengthened by the singing of some hymn and by the
-remembrance of the inestimable blessing which was theirs as a reward of
-their labors and sacrifices.
-
-The first building completed was a block-house twelve feet wide and
-twenty-two feet long, called the “Blue Anchor” and forced to serve a
-variety of purposes. It was used as a general place of business, and
-being on the bank of the river, formed a landing place for vessels, as
-well as a tavern. Later it was also used for a post-house, for Penn,
-realizing the necessity of some regular means of communication between
-Philadelphia and the outlying settlements to the west, soon established
-a messenger post service by which news could be sent and received once a
-week. Travellers could also be provided with horses if desired. Few
-availed themselves of this service at first, it is true, for the rates
-were very high; the delivery of a letter from Philadelphia to Trenton
-Falls in New Jersey, for example, costing threepence, and ninepence to
-Baltimore, Maryland. The “Blue Anchor” soon had companions, however. In
-the course of a few months as many as eighty houses had been built and a
-regular trade gradually developed. Merchants set up shops supplied with
-merchandise such as was constantly arriving by vessel from England.
-Trained artisans were now available to do the work that every man had
-been hitherto obliged to perform for himself as best he could. The
-husbandman betook himself to the hoe and plough wherever there was a
-clearing large enough to use them and won such rich harvests from the
-virgin soil that it soon became no longer necessary to bring grain from
-abroad.
-
-The interiors of the houses were quite as rude and rough as the
-outsides. Once sure of a sound roof to cover them, the settlers were
-content with only the barest necessities in the way of household
-furniture, whatever luxuries and comforts they may have been accustomed
-to in the past. Costly furnishings would have formed indeed a strange
-contrast to the rough bark-covered logs that constituted the walls, and
-the covering of lime and moss that served as hangings, or the
-hard-packed clay that took the place of boards for flooring. A table, a
-bench or two, a bed, all hewed by hand with an axe and innocent of saw
-or plane, besides a few necessary cooking utensils,—these sufficed for
-the needs of the hard-working settlers, who only sought the shelter of a
-house when night or stormy weather made work without impossible and the
-axe and plough must needs be laid aside. Not until the original
-block-houses began to be replaced by stone buildings was any thought
-given to interior convenience, but as soon as it became possible to
-employ the services of skilled workmen the question of comfort and even
-elegance began to be more considered. Nor was this long in coming, for
-in less than a year from the time when Penn first landed at Newcastle
-there were more than a hundred stone houses erected in Philadelphia, and
-two years later the number had increased to six hundred. Penn could with
-truth assure his English friends that his American colony was the
-largest ever founded on private credit, and this in no spirit of undue
-pride or self-applause. “In seven years,” he writes, “with the help of
-God and of my noble companions, I will show you a province that shall
-rival our neighbors’ growth of forty years.” Nor did he leave any stone
-unturned on his part to make good this prophecy.
-
-One of his chief desires was to provide some means for the education of
-the colonists’ children that they might not grow up rude and ignorant—a
-state of things most undesirable among a people who were to govern
-themselves. This was no easy matter, for the hard-working settler,
-struggling to wrest a home from the wilderness, needed the help of his
-children as soon as they were old enough to be of any use. He himself
-was little disposed after the day’s labors to devote the evenings to
-teaching his children, even did his own education warrant it, nor could
-he spare the time to send them to a school. Any regular form of tuition,
-moreover, could only be possible to those living in Philadelphia. For
-those who had settled many miles, sometimes a whole day’s journey to the
-westward, it would have been impossible to make paths through the
-trackless wilderness for their children, even had there been a school
-within reach.
-
-Nevertheless Penn made every exertion to accomplish this end, and as
-early as December, 1683, even before the site of Philadelphia was
-entirely cleared of trees, he had a certain Enoch Flower open a school
-in a wretched wooden cabin which was divided into two rooms. Instruction
-was confined, however, to reading and writing, for the former of which a
-charge of four shillings, the latter six shillings, a quarter, was made,
-to form a school fund. Arrangements were also made by which the children
-of distant settlers could be provided with board and lodging at a cost
-of ten pounds a year. This primitive institution was gradually improved
-and enlarged till in six years’ time the position of head master was
-assumed by Penn’s friend, George Keith. By the efforts of a certain
-William Bradford who had come over from England on the _Welcome_, a
-printing press was also set up in Philadelphia, the first product of
-which, of any note, was a calendar for the year 1687.
-
-Another of Penn’s special cares was the maintenance of friendly
-relations with the Indians, for which Colonel Markham had already paved
-the way. He made it a personal duty to win their confidence and to this
-end mingled with them as much as possible, roaming about with them
-through the forest, wholly unarmed, sharing their meals, and even
-joining in the games and sports of the young men, at which he sometimes
-displayed skill or agility equal to their own. In this way he also
-learned their language and became so familiar with their habits and
-manner of thought that it became as easy for him to communicate with
-them as if he had been one of themselves.
-
- [Illustration: _PENN AND THE INDIANS_]
-
-It was necessary, however, for him to establish peaceful relations with
-all the Indian tribes claiming his territory as their hunting grounds,
-as well as with those nearer at hand, for the farther the settlers
-penetrated into the wilderness the greater was the danger of their being
-treated by the Indians as hostile invaders, unless protected by some
-agreement. He therefore determined to invite all the tribes to a general
-council for the purpose of concluding a solemn treaty of peace and
-friendship.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VII
- The Indian Conference—Signing of the Treaty—Penn Returns to England to
- Defend his Rights against Lord Baltimore—Accession of James the
- Second—His Dethronement and Accession of William the Third
-
-
-The place chosen by Penn for this conference was a spot which had been
-used by the natives from time immemorial for such purposes. It was
-called “Sakimaxing,” now Shakamaxon, meaning “Place of the King,” and
-was situated on the bank of the Delaware not far from the site of
-Philadelphia. The wide-spreading branches of a huge elm, then at least a
-hundred and fifty years old, shaded the beautiful spot which commanded a
-superb view of the river and the dark woods of the New Jersey shore
-beyond. Long before a paleface ever entered these regions the Indians
-had assembled here to hold their councils, settle their disputes, and
-smoke the pipe of peace, as was their custom. It was here too that
-Colonel Markham had first treated with them.
-
- [Illustration: _THE CONFERENCE_]
-
-They willingly obeyed the summons of the “great Onas,” as they called
-the white chief who had completely won their hearts, while the distant
-tribes who had never seen Penn in person were most curious to behold
-this paleface of whom they had heard so much and who must be so
-different from any other of whom they had ever heard. They arrived in
-bands, in their picturesque garb, the skin of some animal or a handwoven
-blanket wrapped about the upper part of their bodies, which were marked
-with strange signs and painted in the most brilliant colors, their feet
-enclosed in leather moccasins, making possible a light and perfectly
-noiseless tread, their heads adorned with the huge war bonnets of
-many-colored feathers. All the great chiefs were present, among them the
-wise old Tamemund, most distinguished of all. Penn, now in the prime of
-manhood, was handsomely dressed in European fashion to receive his
-Indian friends. The long coat with its rows of shining buttons and lace
-ruffles falling from the wrists fitted smoothly over his tall,
-well-built frame and half covered the slashed knee breeches. He wore,
-according to the custom of the time, a long curled wig on which rested a
-plain beaver hat. As he stood there calm and dignified, as became a
-great leader, surrounded by a few of his closest friends, among whom was
-Colonel Markham, already known to most of the Indians, the kindness and
-benevolence that shone in his dark eyes could not but win the confidence
-of these simple children of the forest.
-
-After the pipe of peace had been passed around the circle, Tamemund
-arose and placed on his head a sort of crown, or wreath, to which was
-attached a small horn. This was to signify that the spot as well as the
-company was now consecrated, so to speak, and the conference could
-proceed. He then seated himself again, surrounded by the oldest and most
-renowned chiefs of tribes, the warriors forming a semi-circle behind
-them, while the youths who had not yet attained the dignity of braves
-ranged themselves in the background. Tamemund now announced that his
-children were ready to listen to the great Onas.
-
-Slowly and with dignity Penn arose in answer to this summons, and after
-letting his keen glance travel lightly over the assembled group, waiting
-silent and motionless for his words, he began to speak, using the Lenni
-Lennapee dialect, with which he was most familiar, and preserving as far
-as possible the figurative language of the Indians. The Great Spirit, so
-he declared, who made all men and to whom all good men return after
-death, who reads all hearts, knew that he and his children meant well by
-their red brothers and sincerely wished to live in peace and concord
-with them and to be their friends and to help them in every way
-possible. This too was the will of the Great Spirit, that all his people
-should be as one family, bearing one another’s burdens and sharing one
-another’s sorrows. Thus would he and his children treat their Indian
-brothers; musket and sword should be discarded and they should live
-together friendly and loyally. In return they hoped for the same pledge
-from the redmen, in whose justice and honesty they had the firmest
-trust.
-
-After these introductory words, which were received with repeated signs
-of approval from his audience, Penn read aloud the treaty of peace,
-drawn up by himself, and explained its various points more in detail. It
-stipulated that everything should be free, alike to the palefaces and
-their red brothers, and the doors of the one be ever open to the other,
-that the children of Onas would listen to no false tales against their
-brothers, who on their part must believe no evil of the palefaces, but
-each must agree to report to the other anything that should come to his
-knowledge which might prove harmful to him. Should any one suffer a real
-injury he must not take vengeance himself, but lay the matter before his
-chief or Onas, when sentence should be passed by the judgment of twelve
-just men; after this the injury must be forgotten as if it had never
-occurred. Lastly, this treaty of friendship should be handed down to
-their children and be kept sacred so long as water flowed in the rivers
-or the sun, moon, and stars shone in the heavens.
-
-Penn then placed the written treaty on the ground between himself and
-the Indian chiefs, who retired to hold a brief consultation, after which
-Tamemund answered for his companions that they were satisfied with the
-treaty and would keep it in the letter and in the spirit. This was all.
-No oaths were taken, no seal set; the simple word of both was
-sufficient. It has been said of this treaty made by Penn with the
-Indians, in contrast to the many signed and sealed between Christian
-peoples only stands alone as the only treaty never sworn to and never
-broken. While the other settlers in the New World were perpetually at
-warfare with the Indians, and many were slain by them in the most cruel
-manner, there was never a drop of blood shed in this manner in the
-Quaker colony. The memory of Penn, the great Onas, was cherished by the
-natives long after he had left America and even after his death, and
-none of his children ever lacked shelter and hospitality from them. Nor
-have his countrymen forgotten the service rendered to them by this
-treaty with the Indians. When in 1810 the great elm under which it was
-concluded was blown down in a terrific storm, Penn’s descendants in
-England were sent a block of wood from this famous tree, which,
-according to its rings, had attained an age of nearly three hundred
-years and the enormous circumference of twenty-four feet. On the spot
-where it had stood a simple monument of granite was afterward placed in
-memory of that invaluable covenant to which Pennsylvania was so largely
-indebted for its quick and prosperous development.
-
-The original constitution drawn up by Penn proving in some respects no
-longer adapted to existing conditions in the colony, it was subjected to
-some changes, though the fundamental principles were retained unaltered.
-The government was now placed entirely in the hands of the people, to be
-exercised through their deputies, and a council also chosen by them,
-Penn resigning all share in the administration. “My aim,” he wrote one
-of his friends, “is to leave no power to my successors by which any
-single individual may work harm to or interfere with the welfare of the
-whole country.” How much this was appreciated is shown by the passage of
-a resolution by the government to impose a tax on certain articles for
-Penn’s benefit. He refused to accept it, however, although he might have
-done so with a clear conscience, as it was well known that he had spent
-over twenty thousand pounds at various times in paying the Indians for
-the land they had given up, but in which they still retained the right
-to hunt and fish. On the thirtieth of March, 1683, the newly revised
-constitution was accepted, signed by Penn, and then submitted to the
-English government for approval.
-
-At this time Penn was much interested in the progress of a house which
-was being built for him under Markham’s supervision at a place afterward
-known as Pennsburg, which was to be his family mansion when he brought
-his wife and children out from England. Anxious as he was, however, that
-all about it should be according to his wishes, the troublesome boundary
-dispute called him away to Newcastle, where it was hoped the matter
-might be finally settled. But no agreement was reached and Lord
-Baltimore soon afterward sailed for England to lay his claims before the
-King. Reluctant as he was to leave America, and necessary as his
-presence was there at that time, Penn realized, therefore, that in order
-to protect his own rights he would be forced to follow the same course
-and carry his case to England likewise. This decision was hastened by
-the arrival of letters from home informing him not only of the dangerous
-illness of his wife, but also of the outbreak of fresh persecutions
-against all dissenters, and especially the Quakers. The Friends wrote
-urging his return and beseeching him to use his influence at court once
-more in their favor, as he had so often done in the past. Moreover, his
-enemies had circulated various calumnies against him which could only be
-refuted by himself in person.
-
-There seemed no choice left him. He must put the Atlantic Ocean between
-him and his province, for which he had labored so zealously and so
-successfully for more than a year and a half. But before he sailed he
-once more summoned the Indian chiefs to bid them farewell and urge them
-even more strongly than before to keep faith with him and observe their
-treaty with his “children.” During his absence the business of
-government was entrusted to a few chosen citizens on whom he could
-depend to carry out his ideas and principles. How hard it was for him to
-leave in spite of his anxiety to be at the bedside of his sick wife, and
-how much at heart he had the welfare of his province, is shown by the
-fact that even after he had boarded the ship he took time before it
-sailed to write a parting letter of instructions to his deputies, urging
-them to maintain the peace he had striven so hard to establish and
-invoking the blessing of God on the new settlement.
-
-The return voyage was a more prosperous one than the last, and in June,
-1684, Penn landed safely on his native shores again. The anxiety he had
-suffered during the voyage as to his wife’s illness fortunately proved
-groundless, for he found her quite restored to health, thus leaving
-nothing to mar the joy of reunion with his family. He did not long enjoy
-this happiness, however, for his first care was to secure some
-settlement of his dispute with Lord Baltimore. He hastened to London,
-therefore, after a few days, to present himself at court, where he was
-most graciously received both by the King and the Duke of York, who
-assured him that the matter should be promptly adjusted in all fairness.
-The King falling ill soon after this, however, the subject was again
-deferred and Lord Baltimore determined to take advantage of the
-situation by possessing himself of the disputed territory. He sent word,
-therefore, to his agents in America to seize it by force, ejecting all
-settlers who refused to acknowledge his sovereignty or to pay the tax
-imposed by him. Nothing but the threat made by the government of
-Pennsylvania of an immediate complaint to the King prevented the
-execution of this order, the result of which interference was that in
-addition to the malicious charges already heaped upon Penn by his
-enemies it was said that this apostle of peace had done his best to
-kindle a civil war in America.
-
-On the sixth of February, 1685, King Charles the Second died and his
-brother the Duke of York succeeded to the throne as James the Second.
-The time now seemed ripe for Penn to pave the way for the establishment
-in England of that liberty of conscience for which he had already made
-so many sacrifices and secured so successful a home across the sea. The
-new King had always been opposed to the religious persecutions that had
-existed during his brother’s reign and Penn looked with confidence for
-some manifestation of these sentiments now that James was on the throne.
-Nor was he disappointed. In response to a petition addressed to the new
-sovereign by Penn, an order was immediately issued suspending all
-penalties against religious offenders and releasing those who were
-imprisoned for such reasons, among whom were more than twelve hundred
-Quakers alone. But the mere exercise of the royal right of pardon by no
-means satisfied Penn. His aim was to secure universal liberty of
-conscience in England by the passage of a law which should guarantee
-this, and through the favor he enjoyed with the King he still hoped to
-bring it about. In order to be near at hand, therefore, he removed his
-residence from Worminghurst to London, that he might lose no opportunity
-of exerting his influence with James, nor did the fact of his being
-accused of having secretly joined the Catholic religion to please the
-King deter him in the least, accustomed as he was to all sorts of
-calumny.
-
-The political intrigues in which James the Second was continually
-involved, and which finally led to another revolution, Penn was careful
-to avoid, and he would gladly have exchanged the turmoil of court life
-for his peaceful transatlantic colony had not a feeling of duty to the
-cause he had undertaken urged him to remain where he might be of some
-use. He spent much time at court and was held in high regard by the
-King, who permitted him to say many things that no other could have
-ventured with impunity. This was well known and Penn’s house was
-constantly besieged with petitioners seeking to profit by his influence
-with the King. Yet firm as was Penn’s confidence in James’ good faith,
-he could not blind himself to the ever-increasing distrust and
-dissatisfaction with which his subjects regarded him. Not only did he
-openly practise the rites of his religion, having a magnificent chapel
-built near the palace for the observance of Catholic worship, but he
-also instituted several monastic orders, while the Jesuits were
-permitted such influence at court that it was generally feared an
-attempt would be made to introduce that religion as the state form of
-worship. This suspicion was still further increased when in March, 1687,
-the King summarily abolished all penal laws against dissenters,
-including the so-called Test Act, which permitted none but members of
-the established church to hold public office of any kind. As this act
-had been originally framed for the express purpose of excluding
-Catholics from the government, its abolition naturally was regarded with
-alarm.
-
-Rejoiced as Penn was at the repeal of the hated laws against dissenters,
-he felt it his duty to warn the King against showing such open favor
-toward Catholicism, urging him at the same time to secure the authority
-of Parliament for these reforms. But James heeded neither the warning
-nor the appeal and insisted on the exercise of absolute power without
-reference to Parliament. Fearing lest the abolition of some of the
-fundamental national laws might follow in the same arbitrary manner, a
-storm of protest followed and a general revolt seemed imminent. Many
-eyes had already been turned toward the King’s son-in-law, Prince
-William of Orange, as a possible successor to the English throne, and at
-this crisis the Prince, being even then in communication with the
-malcontents in England, was approached with offers as to the
-dethronement of James, offers which he had no scruples in accepting.
-
-On the fifth of November, 1688, he accordingly landed on the English
-coast with a well-armed force and was hailed with general acclamations,
-the troops hastily collected by the King for his own defence also
-deserting to his standard. On hearing this news James fled from London,
-thinking to escape to France, but being discovered on his way to the
-coast he was advised by his friends to return to London. At the approach
-of the Prince of Orange, however, he again fled, and this time succeeded
-in reaching the shores of France in safety, where he was willingly given
-shelter by his friend Louis the Fourteenth.
-
-On the twenty-second of January, 1689, the throne of England was
-declared vacant by Parliament and the Prince of Orange proclaimed King,
-as William the Third, on subscribing to a law regulating the
-prerogatives of the crown as well as the State and depriving the
-sovereign of those rights which James had so arbitrarily exercised of
-abolishing laws on his own absolute authority or of interfering with
-their execution.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter VIII
-Penn Tried for Treason and Acquitted—Withdrawal of Penn’s Charter—Death
- of his Wife and Son—Second Marriage—Journey to America—Penn’s
-Home—Attempts to Correct Abuses—Returns to England and Encounters Fresh
- Dangers—Penn in the Debtors’ Prison—Ingratitude of the Colonists
-
-
-The flight of King James was the signal for the departure of his friends
-and favorites also, but Penn refused to leave the country in spite of
-urgent entreaties from all sides to do so. Calm in the consciousness
-that he had done nothing which was not for the honor and welfare of
-England, he persisted in this determination even when the houses of many
-who were supposed to favor the fugitive King were burned by the
-populace. When called upon by the council, which had assumed the reins
-of government, to explain his relations with James, he declared simply
-that his life had been devoted to the service of his country and the
-Protestant religion, that the King had been his father’s friend and his
-own guardian, and that while he had always shown him the respect and
-obedience due from a subject, he had done nothing and should do nothing
-inconsistent with his duty to God and his country.
-
-On this frank declaration he was allowed to go free, after giving a bond
-of six thousand pounds, until his public trial should take place, at
-which he was later acquitted. In spite of this, however, he was twice
-again tried for treason, in one case even being accused of complicity in
-a plot to restore James the Second to the throne, but his innocence was
-so clearly proved and his frank simplicity made so favorable an
-impression on his judges and on the King as well, that in both cases he
-was fully exonerated and discharged from custody. Owing to his being
-still under suspicion, however, and secretly watched, he was doubtless
-warned to remain out of sight for a time, for except for some works of
-his which were published at this period, even his friends saw nothing of
-him for a space of two years. The passage of a law framed by the new
-King acknowledging the existence of dissenters and forbidding their
-persecution in future rejoiced Penn greatly, even though the Test Act
-still remained in force and only members of the established church could
-enjoy the full rights of citizenship. But other matters had arisen in
-the meantime that caused him great uneasiness.
-
-War between France and England again seemed inevitable, in which case
-the North American States would be placed in a position of great danger,
-the French having established such friendly relations with the Indians
-that an alliance between them must be expected. Under these
-circumstances it seemed absolutely necessary for Penn to carry out the
-plan he had long had in mind of returning to Pennsylvania to protect the
-rights he had earned by such labor and sacrifice. An unforeseen event,
-however, interfered for a time with this intention, for on the tenth of
-March, 1692, a royal decree was issued placing both Pennsylvania and New
-Jersey under the military command of a Colonel Fletcher, who was to
-defend them against the hostile tribes of Indians already on the
-war-path. It came about in this way. The North American provinces,
-already grown or growing into States, having been made practically
-independent either by gift or purchase during the preceding reigns, King
-William determined to unite them again with the English crown and
-thereby provide himself with part of the force he needed for the war
-with France. As the Quakers of Pennsylvania had shown no great haste to
-offer allegiance to the new sovereign, Penn’s enemies had taken
-advantage of this fact to urge the withdrawal of his charter, and while
-Penn himself had no doubt that this arbitrary measure would be revoked
-in the course of time, and felt convinced that the money he had spent in
-purchasing the land from the Indians, almost his entire fortune, must
-constitute an indubitable claim to the province, still the blow was a
-hard one and he found himself in a by no means encouraging situation.
-Added to this were family cares and anxieties, both his wife and eldest
-son being seriously ill at the time.
-
-Amid these troubles he was only sustained by his faith in God and in the
-ultimate triumph of right, a faith which was justified after some delay
-by the restoration to him of his American province, the King, however,
-reserving the right to defend it until the end of the war, a condition
-to which Penn, being a Quaker, could conscientiously make no objection.
-
-Penn’s greatest anxiety now was to return to America, but he was still
-detained in England by the condition of his oldest son, who had
-developed consumption. Shortly before this he had experienced the bitter
-sorrow of losing Guli, his beloved wife, who for twenty-one years had
-been the joy of his life. Being unable consequently to leave England he
-arranged by permission of the government to send a few trustworthy
-representatives to Pennsylvania to protect his rights while he remained
-to care for his sick son. After an illness of two years Springett died,
-February 10, 1696, and the heartbroken father exclaimed: “I have lost in
-him all that a father can lose in a son.”
-
-Penn was now left in sole care of his two remaining children, Letty and
-William, the latter of whom, resembling his grandfather more than his
-father in character, needed judicious control. It was this fact chiefly
-that induced Penn, then nearly fifty years old, to marry again. At the
-beginning of the year 1696 he was united to Hannah Callowhill of
-Bristol, a sensible, pious woman, who presented him with six children
-and outlived him several years. Still Penn found himself unable to go
-back to Pennsylvania, which he had not seen for thirteen years. For
-neither his wife nor his daughter Letty, now grown to womanhood, could
-make up their minds to follow him to America and leave their native
-land, perhaps forever. As little would his son William listen even to
-the idea of exchanging the pleasures he enjoyed at home for the monotony
-of life in Pennsylvania.
-
-By the year 1699, however, the English government had received so many
-complaints of mismanagement on the part of Markham and Penn’s other
-representatives there that Penn, fearing he might again be in danger of
-losing his province, decided to make the move to America at any cost,
-especially as the French war had been brought to a close by the Peace of
-Ryswick and the usual peaceful conditions might be expected again to
-exist in Pennsylvania. Under these circumstances his wife and daughter
-abandoned their opposition to the plan, but young William still refusing
-to leave England, the family were forced to sail without him. Owing to
-contrary winds, the passage this time was a very long one, lasting fully
-three months, a fortunate occurrence as it proved, notwithstanding
-general complaints, for they thereby escaped an epidemic of some
-malignant fever which had caused great loss of life in Philadelphia.
-
-Penn’s return to his province after an absence of fifteen years was
-hailed with universal rejoicing, and now that he had brought his family
-with him it was hoped he would remain to watch over the people who had
-so long been deprived of his fatherly care. It must indeed have been a
-temptation to Penn to settle down here in peace for the rest of his
-days, for his Pennsburg had now grown into a most beautiful estate. The
-land chosen for it by himself and Markham was superbly situated and
-protected against any kind of attack by the Delaware River, which almost
-entirely surrounded it, affording at the same time a delicious coolness
-that made it comfortable even in the intense heat of summer. The house,
-which was built overlooking the river, was sixty feet in length by forty
-in depth and was surrounded with magnificent gardens, which were Penn’s
-special delight. Beyond these stretched a fine park, left for the most
-part in its natural wildness and filled with huge trees whose
-interlacing branches formed a canopy overhead, while here and there were
-artfully planned nooks and bits of fine landscape gardening. The lower
-story of the stately mansion was almost entirely taken up by a great
-hall capable of accommodating the largest assemblies, while the upper
-contained the living rooms, the windows of which commanded a charming
-view across the river to the wooded shores of New Jersey. The extensive
-outbuildings included a fine stable, for Penn was a great lover of
-horses, and on the water before the house was moored a charming pleasure
-yacht for excursions on the river. Penn’s wife and daughter were equally
-pleased with this delightful home, and as the master of the house was
-fond of having guests and willingly permitted all innocent forms of
-amusement, they found little reason to regret the change to which they
-had found it so hard to reconcile themselves.
-
-Penn himself, however, had little time to devote to pleasure, for much
-and difficult work awaited him. First of all it was necessary to rectify
-the evils which had given rise to so much complaint, chief of which was
-the introduction of contraband trade. He soon found that by no means all
-the inhabitants of his colony shared his disinterestedness or his
-loftiness of purpose. He met with especial opposition in his efforts to
-better the condition of the negro slaves. This traffic in human beings
-had continued to flourish ever since his first visit to America, for at
-that time its infamy was not recognized. The blacks were looked upon as
-creatures little above the brutes, to buy and sell whom was perfectly
-legitimate. In the first constitution drawn up by him, Penn had inserted
-an article stipulating that negro servants should be freed after
-fourteen years of service, provided they gave their former masters
-two-thirds of all they produced from the land assigned to them, failing
-which they were to return to servitude. This did not prevent the
-continuation of slavery, however, the legality or illegality of which
-being regarded as a question which no reasonable man need trouble
-himself about. The German settlers from the Rhine Palatinate were the
-only ones to protest against it, and they indeed left no stone unturned
-to secure support and recognition for their cause. Penn’s attempts to
-introduce a law for the benefit of the negroes therefore met with such
-strong opposition from the assembly that he was forced to abandon his
-benevolent plans until a more favorable opportunity should occur. He
-kept no slaves himself, preferring to hire those of his neighbors when
-he needed their services.
-
-The Indians were overjoyed at the return of the great Onas, who
-immediately renewed the old friendly relations with them. They had
-faithfully observed the treaty concluded in 1682 and had fared so well
-in consequence that other tribes which had then held aloof were now
-eager to join the alliance, to which Penn gladly agreed, as it would add
-in no small degree to the safety of his province. After this ceremony
-had been performed in the manner already described, Penn entertained his
-new allies in the great hall of his mansion, while they returned the
-hospitality by performing some of their wild dances upon the lawn for
-their host and his family.
-
-Penn continued to labor unceasingly for the welfare not only of his own,
-but also of the neighboring provinces for two years, when once more he
-was interrupted by the arrival of bad news from England. This was the
-introduction of a bill into Parliament bringing all proprietary
-governments under the control of the crown, and it was with difficulty
-that Penn’s friends succeeded in having the hearing deferred until he
-could return from America. His presence in England therefore seemed
-indispensable at this juncture and the assembly of Pennsylvania urged
-him to lose no time. All necessary measures of government were hastily
-arranged and some alterations made in the constitution, but already it
-had become painfully evident that the representatives of the people were
-seeking their own advantage only and paying little heed to the interests
-of the man to whom they owed so much. They even refused to furnish the
-means for his journey to England, though it was undertaken entirely at
-their behest and in their interest, and Penn was forced to depend on
-raising the necessary money during his stay in London by the sale of
-some of his lands.
-
-His wife and daughter were glad enough to return to England. The novelty
-and excitement of the new life had worn away by this time and they
-hastened as much as possible the preparations for departure. The
-Indians, on the contrary, were bitterly disappointed when they heard
-that the great Onas was to leave them again so soon. They came from near
-and far to bid him farewell and were only consoled by the assurance that
-during his absence the same justice and friendship should be shown them,
-to insure which Penn made both the council and his deputy, Colonel
-Hamilton, personally responsible. As a parting gift he presented the
-city of Philadelphia with a deed of grant for the land on which it
-stood, and after promising to send his son out at once, that he might
-become familiar with the nature and needs of the country over which he
-might one day claim ownership, Penn left the shores of America, never to
-return.
-
-On his arrival in England, toward the end of 1701, he found the
-situation by no means so bad as he had feared. It had been merely a plot
-on the part of his enemies to deprive him of his ownership of
-Pennsylvania without any indemnification. Upon Penn’s proving that he
-had relinquished a claim on ten thousand pounds against the crown in
-exchange for his patent, which document had been drawn up in the proper
-legal form; that besides this he had acquired undisputed possession of
-the land by subsequent purchase from the Indians; and finally, that the
-interest on that ten thousand pounds had by this time increased it to
-more than double that sum, which must lawfully be paid to him if he were
-deprived of his province, even King William was forced to recognize the
-justice of his cause and the proposed bill was abandoned, never to be
-revived again.
-
-Penn had not neglected to fulfil his promise to the Pennsylvanians and
-immediately after his arrival had ordered his son to leave as soon as
-possible for Philadelphia; but it was with great reluctance that he did
-so, for during his father’s absence the pleasure-loving youth had
-abandoned himself to every form of dissipation, to the great detriment
-not only of his health, but of his pocket. To send him out to America
-alone without restraint or guardianship of any kind meant merely a
-continuation of his dissolute career, with perhaps ruin and disgrace to
-the honorable name he bore. Nor was the young man any better pleased
-with the idea, and it was not till his father had opened his eyes to the
-seriousness of the situation and agreed to pay his debts that he yielded
-and promised to go without further protest. Before he sailed Penn wrote
-to some of the Friends in Philadelphia begging them to watch over his
-son with fatherly care and solicitude. All seemed to go well at first
-with young William. He troubled himself little, to be sure, as to the
-province or its affairs, preferring rather to spend his time in hunting
-and fishing; but the evil spirit in him soon broke out afresh, and he
-plunged once more into a life of wild excess, defying all the laws of
-the country, and after he had succeeded in squandering huge sums of
-money and making himself thoroughly detested, he went back to England,
-unbidden and unregretted.
-
-The payment of these new debts contracted by his son caused Penn great
-financial embarrassment, which was still further increased by the
-unexpected and extortionate demands of a creditor. This was the
-successor of his former advocate and man of business, who at the time of
-Penn’s first journey to America had advanced him the sum of twenty-eight
-hundred pounds in exchange for which and ostensibly as a mere matter of
-form he had induced his unsuspecting client to sign a bond pledging the
-whole province of Pennsylvania as security. Now without any warning an
-account of fourteen thousand pounds was sent in to Penn with the threat
-that an attachment would be served if this sum were not immediately
-paid. After investigating this fraudulent account, he declared himself
-willing to settle for some four thousand pounds, all to which the
-creditor was justly entitled. This the latter refused to accept,
-however, and the owner of Pennsylvania was forced to go to a debtors’
-prison as the assembly of that colony refused to make him any advances
-or even pay the revenues owing to him. In this emergency Penn offered
-for the sum of twenty thousand pounds to sell his whole province to
-Queen Anne, who, as the second daughter of the dethroned King James the
-Second, had succeeded to the throne on the death of William the Third,
-in 1702. She refused to take it, however, and at length he managed by
-great effort to raise between seven and eight thousand pounds, with
-which his false creditor finally agreed to content himself, Penn thereby
-procuring release.
-
-The long confinement had so seriously affected Penn’s health that he now
-decided to leave London and moved with his family to Brentford, some
-eight miles distant, where he devoted himself entirely to his former
-vocation of preaching the gospel throughout the country and conducting
-meetings for his Quaker brethren. The increasing infirmities of age,
-however, soon put an end to these journeyings, Penn having now reached
-the age of sixty-five, and in 1710, therefore, he retired to Rushcombe
-in Buckinghamshire, where he remained until his death.
-
-From there he addressed a communication to the settlers in Pennsylvania,
-reproaching them for the ingratitude with which they had rewarded his
-labors and sacrifices in their behalf. His last journey to England had
-been taken solely in their interests to prevent the absorption of that
-province by the crown, in which case their existing constitution would
-have been abolished. He had made every effort to accomplish this
-purpose, in spite of their indifference, with the result that he had
-become impoverished while they had grown rich; while they, thanks to his
-foresight and perseverance, were in possession of an empire, liberty,
-and power, and he, for their sake and because of their avarice, had been
-forced to languish in a debtors’ prison. He was forced to conclude,
-therefore, that it was their wish to sever the old relations hitherto
-existing between them and himself, in which case, if they would signify
-their desire by the choice of a successor, he would then know how to
-act.
-
-This letter did not fail to impress the conscience-stricken
-Pennsylvanians. At the popular election which shortly followed a new
-assembly was chosen in place of the one that had proved so ungrateful to
-their benefactor, and it was no small consolation to Penn, broken as he
-was by trouble and ill health, that this new assembly unanimously agreed
-on the passage of resolutions that filled him with hope for the future
-of the province.
-
-
-
-
- Chapter IX
- Death of his Dissolute Son William—Penn’s Last Illness and Mental
- Decline—His Death and Will
-
-
-The younger William Penn meanwhile had gone from bad to worse, to the
-bitter disappointment of his father, who after the untimely death of his
-first-born had placed all his hopes on this unworthy son. After having
-entirely estranged his family by his excesses, he entered the army in
-defiance of his father’s principles, but resigned soon after when an
-opening offered for election to Parliament. Failing to accomplish this,
-however, he abandoned his wife and children and went to the continent,
-where he led a life of riotous adventure in the various capitals till
-his death in 1720.
-
-It may have been the arrival of some distressing news about this
-degenerate son that led to the apoplectic stroke with which Penn was
-seized early in the year 1712 and which in his feeble state of health
-was a serious matter, although he rallied for a time sufficiently to be
-able to occupy himself with colonial affairs. The question of slavery
-was much on his mind. He had become more and more convinced of its
-inhumanity and sinfulness and had great hopes of securing its abolition,
-as the untiring efforts of the German settlers had secured the passage
-of a law forbidding the importation of any more slaves.
-
-This first stroke, however, was soon followed by two more which left him
-a wreck physically and mentally. The devoted care of his wife and
-children helped to avert any immediate danger to his life, but the
-brilliant mind was hopelessly shattered. He became like a child, serene
-and peaceful fortunately, playing about the house or garden most of the
-time with his own young children and those of his son, whom with their
-deserted mother he had taken into his own home at Rushcombe.
-Occasionally there would be lucid moments when he was able to converse
-intelligently, and then the placid smile would vanish from his lips at
-the sight of his wife’s care-worn face and the realization of the
-burdens she had to bear not only in the management of family affairs,
-but also to keep up the extensive correspondence required by colonial
-matters.
-
-In this condition Penn lived on for five long years, sometimes able to
-recognize his old friends when they came to see him and even exchange a
-few intelligible words with them, but toward the end the power both of
-speech and memory failed him. On the thirtieth of May, 1718, he passed
-away quietly and peacefully at the age of seventy-four, after a life of
-ceaseless devotion to the service of God and the welfare of humanity.
-
-In a will made while still in full possession of his mental faculties,
-Penn left the following directions: His son William, having already
-squandered the money left him by his deceased mother as her family
-inheritance, was debarred from any share in the estate, the English
-property, yielding at that time an annual revenue of some fifteen
-hundred pounds, passing to his children instead. To each of the
-grandchildren, as well as his daughter Letty, he bequeathed ten thousand
-acres of the best land still unsold in Pennsylvania, and after disposing
-of enough more of this land to pay the expenses of his burial, the
-remainder was to be divided among his five children by his second wife,
-Hannah Callowhill, who was made executor with an annuity of three
-hundred pounds. The management of his colonial affairs he entrusted to
-his two friends the Earls of Oxford and Pawlett, with orders to dispose
-of his right of possession on the most favorable terms possible, either
-to the English crown or elsewhere, the proceeds to be invested for the
-benefit of these children.
-
-Penn had arranged his worldly affairs with his usual wisdom and
-foresight. While it might appear by the terms of the will that he had
-shown a preference for his son William’s children by leaving them the
-English property with its assured returns, his own receiving only the
-doubtful American possessions which of late had yielded a revenue of
-little more than five hundred pounds a year, yet as a matter of fact it
-was quite the reverse; for during the twenty years of peace and
-prosperity that followed the French and Indian war the value of the
-colonial property increased enormously. In 1797 the government of
-Pennsylvania paid the descendants of William Penn the sum of one hundred
-and thirty thousand pounds for their rights of ownership, exclusive of
-all personal properties, as well as back-standing payments and rents due
-from the sale of lands left them by the founder of the State; while in
-England they also received the additional sum of five hundred thousand
-pounds voted by Parliament as indemnity for the losses suffered by him.
-
-The body of William Penn was laid to rest beside those of his first wife
-and their eldest son in the quiet churchyard of the village of Jordan in
-Buckinghamshire. Hundreds came from far and near to pay their last
-respects to the noble Quaker, and it needed not the eulogies pronounced
-over his grave to proclaim to the world that a great and good man had
-passed away.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX
-
-
-The following is a chronological statement of the more important events
-in William Penn’s life:
-
- 1644 Birth
- 1658 Death of Oliver Cromwell
- 1659 Penn enters Oxford
- 1660 Expulsion from Oxford
- 1660 Visits Germany
- 1664 War between England and Holland
- 1665 Penn in the naval service
- 1667 Adopts the Quaker faith
- 1668 Begins preaching
- 1670 Penn’s arrest
- 1672 Marriage
- 1673 Fresh Quaker persecutions
- 1677 Visits Holland
- 1681 Royal cession of land to Penn
- 1682 Penn goes to America
- 1682 Founding of Philadelphia
- 1682 Treaty made with the Indians
- 1683 The new constitution accepted
- 1684 Penn returns to England
- 1685 Death of Charles the Second
- 1688 Dethronement of James
- 1696 Second marriage
- 1699 Penn returns to America
- 1701 Penn goes back to England
- 1702 Penn imprisoned for debt
- 1710 Penn retires to private life
- 1718 Death of William Penn
-
-
-
-
- LIFE STORIES FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
-
- _Translated from the German by_
- GEORGE P. UPTON
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- Emperor William First
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- Queen Maria Sophia of Naples
-
- _Musical Biography_
-
- Beethoven
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-
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- Transcriber’s Notes
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of William Penn, by Hugo Oertel
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: William Penn
- Life Stories for Young People
-
-Author: Hugo Oertel
-
-Release Date: July 15, 2020 [EBook #62656]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILLIAM PENN ***
-
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-
-
-Produced by D A Alexander, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
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-</pre>
-
-<div class="img">
-<img class="cover" id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="William Penn" width="786" height="1085" />
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="pic1">
-<img src="images/p08.jpg" alt="" width="585" height="802" />
-<p class="caption"><i>WILLIAM PENN</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<p class="center"><span class="sc"><i>Life Stories for Young People</i></span></p>
-<h1>WILLIAM PENN</h1>
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><i>Translated from the German of
-<br />Hugo Oertel</i></span></p>
-<p class="center">BY
-<br /><span class="large">GEORGE P. UPTON</span>
-<br /><i>Translator of &ldquo;Memories,&rdquo; &ldquo;Immensee,&rdquo; etc.</i></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">WITH FOUR ILLUSTRATIONS</span></p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p09.jpg" alt="A. C. McCLURG &amp; CO." width="200" height="199" />
-</div>
-<p class="center">CHICAGO
-<br />A. C. MCCLURG &amp; CO.
-<br />1911</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center small"><span class="sc">Copyright
-<br />A. C. McClurg &amp; Co.
-<br />1911</span>
-<br />Published September, 1911</p>
-<p class="center smaller">THE &middot; PLIMPTON &middot; PRESS
-<br />[W &middot; D &middot; O]
-<br />NORWOOD &middot; MASS &middot; U &middot; S &middot; A</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_v">v</div>
-<h2>Translator&rsquo;s Preface</h2>
-<p>The life of William Penn is one which cannot
-be too closely studied by American
-youth, and the German author of this little
-volume has told its story in most attractive
-style. Not one of the early settlers of the United
-States had loftier purpose in view, more exalted ambition,
-or nobler character. The brotherhood of man
-was his guiding principle, and in seeking to carry out
-his purpose he displayed resolute courage, inflexible
-honesty, and the highest, noblest, and most beautiful
-traits of character. He encountered numerous
-obstacles in his great mission&mdash;imprisonment and
-persecution at home, slanders and calumnies of his
-enemies, intrigues of those who were envious of his
-success, domestic sorrows, and at last, and most
-deplorable of all, the ingratitude of the colonists as
-the settlement grew, and in some cases their enmity.
-It is a shining example of his lofty character and fair
-dealing that the Indians, who were always jealous of
-white men and suspicious of their designs, remained
-his stanch friends to the end, for he never broke
-faith with them. His closing days were sad ones,
-and he died in comparative seclusion, but his name
-will always be preserved by that of the great commonwealth
-which bears it and his principles by the
-name of the metropolis which signifies them. This
-world would be a better one if there were more
-William Penns in it.</p>
-<p><span class="jr">G. P. U.</span></p>
-<p><span class="small"><span class="sc">Chicago</span>, <i>July, 1911</i></span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_vii">vii</div>
-<h2>Contents</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="jr"><span class="jl"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Chapter</span></span></span> <span class="small"><span class="sc">Page</span></span></dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">I </span><a href="#c1"><span class="sc">William Penn&rsquo;s Father&mdash;Childhood of Penn&mdash;Expulsion from Oxford for his Religious Views&mdash;Travels on the Continent</span></a> 11</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">II </span><a href="#c2"><span class="sc">The Plague and its Results&mdash;Penn as a Soldier&mdash;His Religious Struggle&mdash;Becomes a Quaker&mdash;Imprisonment for Attending Meetings&mdash;Death of his Father</span></a> 24</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">III </span><a href="#c3"><span class="sc">Penn&rsquo;s Third Imprisonment&mdash;His Happy Marriage&mdash;Fresh Persecutions&mdash;Visits to Germany&mdash;Quaker Emigration</span></a> 36</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">IV </span><a href="#c4"><span class="sc">The Popish Plot&mdash;Settlement of Virginia&mdash;The Royal Cession to Penn&mdash;Christening of Pennsylvania&mdash;Outlines of Penn&rsquo;s Constitution</span></a> 48</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">V </span><a href="#c5"><span class="sc">Description of Penn&rsquo;s Domain&mdash;Negotiations with the Indians by Penn&rsquo;s Agent&mdash;Death of Penn&rsquo;s Mother&mdash;Final Instructions to his Family&mdash;Departure of the &ldquo;Welcome&rdquo;</span></a> 60</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">VI </span><a href="#c6"><span class="sc">Penn&rsquo;s Arrival&mdash;The Founding of Philadelphia&mdash;First General Assembly&mdash;Building of the &ldquo;Blue Anchor&rdquo;&mdash;The First School and Printing Press</span></a> 72</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">VII </span><a href="#c7"><span class="sc">The Indian Conference&mdash;Signing of the Treaty&mdash;Penn Returns to England to Defend his Rights against Lord Baltimore&mdash;Accession of James the Second&mdash;His Dethronement and Accession of William the Third</span></a> 84</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">VIII </span><a href="#c8"><span class="sc">Penn Tried for Treason and Acquitted&mdash;Withdrawal of Penn&rsquo;s Charter&mdash;Death of his Wife and Son&mdash;Second Marriage&mdash;Journey to America&mdash;Penn&rsquo;s Home&mdash;Attempts to Correct Abuses&mdash;Returns to England and Encounters Fresh Dangers&mdash;Penn in the Debtors&rsquo; Prison&mdash;Ingratitude of the Colonists</span></a> 96</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">IX </span><a href="#c9"><span class="sc">Death of his Dissolute Son William&mdash;Penn&rsquo;s Last Illness and Mental Decline&mdash;His Death and Will</span></a> 109</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">&nbsp; </span><a href="#c10"><span class="sc">Appendix</span></a> 113</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ix">ix</div>
-<h2>Illustrations</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="jr"><span class="small"><span class="sc">Page</span></span></dt>
-<dt><a href="#pic1">William Penn</a><i>Frontispiece</i></dt>
-<dt><a href="#pic2">The Duel</a>22</dt>
-<dt><a href="#pic3">Penn and the Indians</a>82</dt>
-<dt><a href="#pic4">The Conference</a>84</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<h2>William Penn</h2>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="h2line1">Chapter I</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">William Penn&rsquo;s Father&mdash;Childhood of Penn&mdash;Expulsion from Oxford for his Religious Views&mdash;Travels on the Continent</span></h2>
-<p>William Penn was descended from an
-old English family which, as early as the
-beginning of the fifteenth century, had
-settled in the county of Buckinghamshire
-in the southern part of England, and of which a
-branch seems later to have moved to the neighboring
-county of Wiltshire, for in a church in the town
-of Mintye there is a tablet recording the death of
-a William Penn in 1591. It was a grandson and
-namesake of this William Penn, and the father of our
-hero, however, who first made the family name distinguished.
-Brought up as a sailor by his father,
-the captain of a merchantman, with whom he visited
-not only the principal ports of Spain and Portugal,
-but also the distant shores of Asia Minor, he afterward
-entered the service of the government and so
-distinguished himself that in his twentieth year he
-was made a captain in the royal navy. In 1643 he
-married Margaret Jasper, the clever and beautiful
-daughter of a Rotterdam merchant, and from this
-time his sole ambition was to make a name for himself
-and elevate his family to a rank they had not hitherto
-enjoyed. In this he succeeded, partly by policy, but
-also unquestionably by natural ability; for although
-the name of Penn is scarcely enrolled among England&rsquo;s
-greatest naval heroes, yet at the early age of twenty-three
-he had been made a rear-admiral, and two years
-later was advanced to the rank of vice-admiral&mdash;this
-too at a time when advancement in the English
-navy could only be obtained by real merit and
-valuable service.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>Penn&rsquo;s father was also shrewd enough to take
-advantage of circumstances and turn them to his
-profit. Although at heart a royalist, he did not
-scruple to go over to the revolutionists when it became
-evident that the monarchy must succumb to
-the power of the justly incensed people and Parliament;
-and when the head of Charles the First had
-fallen under the executioner&rsquo;s axe and Oliver Cromwell
-had seized the reins of government, Admiral
-Penn was prompt to offer his homage. Cromwell
-on his part may have had some justifiable doubts as
-to the sincerity of this allegiance, but knowing Penn
-to be an ambitious man of the world, he felt reasonably
-sure of winning him over completely to the side
-of the Commonwealth by consulting his interests.
-He had need of such men just then, for the alliance
-between England and Holland, which he was endeavoring
-to bring about, had just been frustrated
-by the passage by Parliament of the Navigation Act
-of 1651, requiring that foreign merchandise should
-be brought to England on English vessels only.
-This was a direct blow at the flourishing trade
-hitherto carried on by the Dutch with English ports,
-and a war with Holland was inevitable. As this
-must of necessity be a naval war, Cromwell was
-quite ready to accept the services of so able and
-experienced an officer as William Penn. The young
-admiral fully justified the Protector&rsquo;s confidence, for
-it was largely owing to his valor that the war, during
-which ten great naval battles were fought, ended in
-complete victory for the English.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>Scarcely less distinguished were his services in the
-subsequent war with Spain, when he was given the
-task of destroying that country&rsquo;s sovereignty in
-the West Indies. He conquered the island of Jamaica,
-which was added to England&rsquo;s possessions, but was
-unable to retrieve an unsuccessful attempt of the
-land forces assisting him to capture the neighboring
-island of Hispaniola. He had been shrewd enough
-to make terms with Cromwell before sailing for the
-West Indies. In compensation for the damages
-inflicted on his Irish property during the civil war
-he was granted an indemnity, besides the promise of
-a valuable estate in Ireland, and the assurance of
-protection for his family during his absence. It was
-well for Penn that he did so, for on his return he was
-summarily deprived of his office and cast into prison&mdash;ostensibly
-for his failure to conquer Hispaniola.
-The real reason, however, for this action on the part
-of Cromwell was doubtless due to his knowledge of
-certain double dealing on the part of Penn, who,
-shrewdly foreseeing that the English Commonwealth
-was destined to be short-lived and that on the death
-of Cromwell the son of the murdered King would
-doubtless be restored to the throne, had secretly
-entered into communication with this prince, then
-living at Cologne on the Rhine, and placed at his
-disposition the entire fleet under his command.
-The offer had been declined, it is true, Charles at
-that time being unable to avail himself of it, but it
-had reached the ears of Cromwell, who took this
-means of punishing the admiral&rsquo;s disloyalty.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<p>That our hero should have been the child of such
-a father proves the fallacy of the saying, &ldquo;The apple
-never falls far from the tree.&rdquo; His mother, fortunately,
-was of a very different and far nobler stamp.
-She seems to have felt no regret at her son&rsquo;s religious
-turn of mind, for later, when the father, enraged at
-his association with the despised Quakers, turned
-him out of doors, she secretly sympathized with the
-outcast and supplied him with money.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>This son, our William Penn, was born in London
-on the fourteenth of October, 1644, as his father was
-floating down the Thames in the battleship of which
-he had just been placed in command. For his early
-education he was indebted entirely to his mother,
-his father&rsquo;s profession keeping him away from home
-most of the time. From what is known of her, this
-must have been of a kind firmly to implant in the
-child&rsquo;s heart the seeds of piety, for such a development
-of spirituality can only be ascribed to impressions
-received in childhood. William was only eleven
-at the time of his father&rsquo;s disgrace, but old enough
-to understand and share his mother&rsquo;s distress at
-the misfortune which fell like a dark shadow across
-his youthful gayety. Even then the boy may have
-realized how little real happiness is to be found in
-a worldly career, and how poor are they whose whole
-thoughts are centred on the things of this life.</p>
-<p>The admiral&rsquo;s imprisonment did not last long,
-however. A petition for pardon having been sent
-to the Protector, he was released and retired with
-his family to bury his blighted ambitions on the Irish
-estate near Cork which he had received as a reward
-for his achievements in the war with Holland. Two
-more children had been born to them in the meantime,
-a daughter, Margaret, and a second son, who
-was named Richard. Here, amid the pleasures and
-occupations of a country life to which he devoted
-himself with the greatest zest and enjoyment, young
-William grew into a slender but stalwart youth.
-When it became time to consider his higher education,
-for which there were no suitable opportunities at
-home, it was decided to send him to Oxford&mdash;a plan
-which was deferred for a time, however, owing to an
-event which was of more concern to Admiral Penn
-than his son&rsquo;s education, since it opened fresh fields
-for his ambition.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>This was the death of Oliver Cromwell on September 3,
-1658. The news revived Penn&rsquo;s still cherished
-plans for assisting in the restoration of Charles
-the Second, thereby laying the foundation of a
-new and brilliant career at the court of the young
-King, whose favor he had already propitiated by
-his offer of the fleet. These schemes he did not dare
-to put into immediate execution for fear of involving
-himself in fresh troubles, the parliamentary party still
-being in power and Cromwell&rsquo;s son Richard chosen
-as his successor. But no sooner had the latter,
-realizing his inability to guide affairs with his father&rsquo;s
-strong hand, resigned the honor conferred upon him,
-no sooner was it announced that Parliament had
-received a message from Charles the Second and was
-favorably inclined toward his restoration to the
-throne, than the aspiring admiral lost not a moment
-in hastening over to Holland to be among the first
-to offer homage to the new King.</p>
-<p>The knighthood which he received from that
-grateful monarch served only as a spur to still greater
-zeal in his interests, to which he devoted himself with
-such success that he not only won over the navy to
-the royal cause by his influence with its officers, but
-having accomplished his election to Parliament, was
-thus able to assist in the decision to recall the exiled
-sovereign. Again he was among the first to carry
-this news to Holland, thereby establishing himself
-still more firmly in the King&rsquo;s favor. Not till these
-affairs were settled and a brilliant future assured for
-himself and his family did Sir William find time to
-think of his son, who was accordingly sent to Christ
-Church, Oxford.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<p>The young man must have soon discovered the
-deficiencies of his previous education and realized
-that he was far behind other students of his own age,
-but he applied himself to his studies with such diligence
-that he made rapid progress and earned the
-entire approbation of his instructors, while his amiability
-and kindness of heart, as well as his skill in all
-sorts of manly sports, made him no less popular with
-his fellow students. But skilful oarsman, sure shot,
-and good athlete as he was, he never lost sight of the
-deeper things of life. Indefatigably as he devoted
-himself to acquiring not only a thorough knowledge
-of the classics, but also of several modern languages,
-so that he was able to converse in French, German,
-Dutch, and Italian, he showed an even greater fondness
-for the study of religion. He was especially
-interested in the writings of the Puritans, which were
-spread broadcast at this time, glowing with Christian
-zeal and denouncing the efforts made by the court
-to introduce Catholic forms and ceremonies into
-divine worship in the universities as well as elsewhere.
-Feeling it a matter of conscience to protest against
-these innovations, Penn, with a number of his fellow
-students, reluctantly determined to resist the orders
-of the King, with whom his father stood in such high
-favor, but whose dissolute life could win neither
-respect nor loyalty from the earnest and high-minded
-youth.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>About this time there appeared at Oxford a man
-whom William had already seen as a child and who
-even then made a deep impression on him. This
-was Thomas Loe, a follower of Fox, the Quaker
-whose teachings he was endeavoring to spread
-throughout the country. He had visited Ireland
-for this purpose and, doubtless at the suggestion of
-Sir William&rsquo;s pious lady, was asked to hold a meeting
-at their house. The eleven-year-old William
-never forgot the effect produced by this sermon.
-Even his father, not usually susceptible to religious
-feeling, was moved to tears, and the boy thought
-what a wonderful place the world would be if all
-were Quakers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<p>Now that this same Thomas Loe had come to
-Oxford, what could be more natural than that the
-young zealot, already roused to opposition and imbued
-with Puritan ideas, should attend these Quaker
-meetings with companions of a like mind? Strengthened
-in his childish impressions and convinced that
-divine truth was embodied in Loe&rsquo;s teachings, Penn
-and his friends refused to attend the established
-form of service, with its ceremonies, for which they
-openly expressed their abhorrence and contempt.
-He was called to account and punished by the college
-authorities for this and for attending the Quaker
-meetings, but it only added fuel to the flame. Indignant
-at this so-called violation of their principles,
-against the injustice of which they felt it a sacred
-duty to rebel, they began to hold meetings among
-themselves for devotional exercises, and only awaited
-a pretext for open revolt. This was soon furnished
-by an order from the King prescribing the wearing
-of collegiate gowns by the students. The young
-reformers not only refused to wear them, but even
-went so far as to attack those who did and tear the
-objectionable garments off from them by force&mdash;a
-proceeding which naturally led to their expulsion
-after an official examination, during which Penn had
-spoken boldly and unreservedly in his own and his
-companions&rsquo; defence.</p>
-<p>The effect of this on the worldly and ambitious
-father may easily be imagined. He had looked to
-his eldest son, on whom he had built such high hopes,
-to carry on his aspiring schemes after his own death,
-and totally unable to comprehend how a mere youth
-could be so carried away by religious enthusiasm,
-the disgrace of William&rsquo;s expulsion from the university
-was a bitter blow to his pride. It was but a cold
-reception therefore that the young man met with on
-his return to the paternal roof. For a long time his
-father refused even to see him, and when he did
-it was only to overwhelm him with the bitterest
-reproaches. He sternly commanded him to abandon
-his absurd religious beliefs and break off all communication
-with his Oxford associates, and when William
-respectfully but firmly refused to do this until he
-should be convinced of their absurdity, the admiral,
-accustomed as an officer to absolute obedience, flew
-into such a passion that he seized his cane and ordered
-his degenerate son out of the house.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>On calmer reflection, however, he became convinced
-of the uselessness of such severity, for William,
-he discovered, though moping about, dejected and
-unhappy, was still keeping up a lively correspondence
-with his Quaker friends, so he resolved to try
-other methods. Knowing by experience the power
-of worldly pleasures to divert the mind of youth
-and drown serious thought in the intoxication of the
-senses, he determined to resort to this dangerous
-remedy for his son, whose ideas of life, to his mind,
-needed a radical change. He therefore arranged for
-William to join a party of young gentlemen of rank
-who were about to set out on a tour of the continent,
-first visiting France and its gay capital, reckoning
-shrewdly that constant association with young companions
-so little in sympathy with Quaker ideas and
-habits would soon convert his son to other views.
-Or if this perhaps did not fully accomplish the purpose,
-the allurements of Paris, where King Louis the
-Fourteenth and his brilliant court set such an example
-of luxury and licentiousness, could not fail to complete
-the cure.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>Little to young Penn&rsquo;s taste as was this journey,
-and especially the society in which he was to make
-it, he did not care to renew his father&rsquo;s scarcely
-cooled anger by opposing it, nor was life at home
-under existing circumstances especially pleasant or
-comfortable. He yielded therefore without protest
-to his father&rsquo;s wishes and set out for Paris with the
-companions chosen for him, well provided with letters
-of introduction which would admit him to the highest
-circles of French society.</p>
-<p>The correctness of the admiral&rsquo;s judgment proved
-well founded, and the associations into which he had
-thrown his son only too well fitted to work the desired
-change. In spite of his inward resistance young
-Penn found himself drawn into a whirl of gayety and
-pleasure for which he soon grew to have more and
-more fondness and which left him no time for serious
-thought. He was presented to the King and became
-a welcome and frequent guest at that dissolute court.
-The life of license and luxury by which he was surrounded
-and against which he had almost ceased to
-struggle failed, however, entirely to subdue his better
-nature, as the following incident will show.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>Returning late one evening from some gathering
-wearing a sword, as French custom demanded, his
-way was suddenly stopped by a masked man who
-ordered him to draw his sword, demanding satisfaction
-for an injury. In vain Penn protested his innocence
-of any offence and his ignorance even of the
-identity of his accuser, but the latter insisted that
-he should fight, declaring Penn had insulted him
-by not returning his greeting. The discussion soon
-attracted a number of auditors, and under penalty
-of being dubbed a coward by refusing to cross swords
-with his adversary, Penn was obliged to yield. But
-if, as is not unlikely, the whole affair was planned by
-his comrades to force him to use arms, a practice
-forbidden among the Quakers, the youth who undertook
-the role of challenger was playing rather a
-dangerous game; for among his other acquirements
-Penn had thoroughly mastered the art of fencing
-and quickly succeeded in disarming his adversary.
-Instead of pursuing his advantage, however, as the
-laws of duelling permitted, the spectators were
-astonished to see him return the rapier with a courtly
-bow to his discomfited foe and silently withdraw.
-He might yield to the prevailing custom so far as to
-draw his sword, but his conscience would not permit
-him to shed human blood.</p>
-<div class="img" id="pic2">
-<img src="images/p29.jpg" alt="" width="580" height="800" />
-<p class="caption"><i>THE DUEL</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>It was with the greatest satisfaction that Sir
-William learned of the change that had been wrought
-in his son, and to make it yet more permanent and
-effectual he ordered him to remain abroad, extending
-his travels to other countries. He was now in a
-position to afford this, as through the favor of the
-King&rsquo;s brother, the Duke of York, he had received
-an important and lucrative post in the admiralty,
-but he would gladly have made any sacrifice to have
-his son return the kind of man he wished him to be.
-But the father&rsquo;s hopes ran too high. Although
-outwardly become a man of the world, William had
-by no means lost all serious purpose in the vortex of
-Parisian life, for he spent some time at Saumur, on
-the Loire, attracted thither by the fame of Moses
-Amyrault, a divine, under whose teaching he remained
-for some time and of whom he became a
-zealous adherent. From there, by his father&rsquo;s
-orders, he travelled through various parts of France
-and then turned his steps toward Italy in order to
-become as familiar with the language as he already
-had with French, and to cultivate his taste in art
-by a study of the rich treasures of that country.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="h2line1">Chapter II</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">The Plague and its Results&mdash;Penn as a Soldier&mdash;His Religious Struggle&mdash;Becomes a Quaker&mdash;Imprisonment for Attending Meetings&mdash;Death of his Father</span></h2>
-<p>In 1664 another war broke out between England
-and Holland, owing to the refusal of the latter
-to allow the existence of English colonies on the
-coast of Guinea, where the Dutch had hitherto
-enjoyed the exclusive trade. Admiral de Ruyter
-was ordered to destroy these settlements and a
-declaration of war followed. The Duke of York,
-then Lord High Admiral of England, believing the
-services of his friend Admiral Penn indispensable at
-such a juncture, appointed him to the command of
-his own flagship with the title of Great Commander.
-This compelled Sir William to recall young Penn to
-take charge of the family affairs during his absence.
-Rumors of Louis the Fourteenth&rsquo;s favorable disposition
-toward the Dutch also made him fear for his son&rsquo;s
-safety in France. The change wrought in William
-by his two years&rsquo; absence could not fail to delight
-the admiral. The seriousness of mind which had
-formerly led him to avoid all worldly pleasures had
-vanished and was replaced by a youthful vivacity
-of manner and a ready wit in conversation that were
-most charming. In appearance too he had improved
-greatly, having grown into a tall and handsome man,
-his face marked by an expression of singular sweetness
-and gentleness, yet full of intelligence and resolution.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<p>To prevent any return to his former habits, his
-father took pains to keep him surrounded by companions
-of rank and wealth and amid the associations
-of a court little behind that of France in the
-matter of license and extravagance. He also had
-him entered at Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn as a student of law, a
-knowledge of which would be indispensable in the
-lofty position to which he aspired for his son and
-heir. And why should not these hopes of future
-distinction be realized? Was he not in high favor
-not only with the King, but also with the Duke of
-York, who must succeed to the throne on the death
-of Charles? Nevertheless, the admiral must still
-have had doubts as to the permanence of this unexpected
-and most welcome change, for when he sailed
-with the Duke of York in March, 1665, he took
-William with him, feeling it safest, no doubt, to keep
-him for a time under his own eye and away from
-all temptation to relapse into his old ways. These
-prudent calculations were soon upset, however, for
-three weeks later, when the first engagement with the
-Dutch fleet took place, young Penn was sent back
-by the Duke of York with despatches to the King
-announcing the victory. As the bearer of these
-tidings he was naturally made welcome at court and
-remained in London, continuing his law studies.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<p>Then came the plague, which broke out in London
-with such violence as to terrify even the most worldly
-and force upon them the thought of death. Persons
-seemingly in perfect health would suddenly fall dead
-in the streets, as many as ten thousand deaths occurring
-in a single day. All who were able to escape fled
-from the city, while those who could not get away
-shut themselves up in their houses, scarcely venturing
-forth to obtain even the necessities of life. The
-terrible scenes which met the eye at every turn
-quickly banished William&rsquo;s newly acquired worldliness
-and turned his thoughts once more to serious
-things. Religious questions absorbed his whole
-mind and became of far greater importance to him
-than those of law, with which he should have been
-occupying himself.</p>
-<p>Sir William observed this new change with alarm
-and displeasure on his return with the fleet, and even
-more so when his services were rewarded by the King
-not only by large additions to his Irish estates, but
-also by promises of still higher preferment in the
-future. Of what use would these honors be if the son
-who was to inherit them insisted on embracing a
-vocation that utterly unfitted him for such a position?
-Again he cast about for a remedy that should prove
-as effectual as the sojourn in France had been, and
-this time he sent his son to the Duke of Ormond,
-Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, whose court, though a
-gay and brilliant one, was not so profligate as those
-at Paris and London. The admiral had overlooked
-one fact, however, in his choice of residence for his
-son; namely, that there were many Quakers in
-Ireland.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
-<p>The letters which he carried procured young Penn
-an instant welcome to court circles in Dublin, where
-his attractive person and his cleverness soon made
-him popular. Again he found himself plunged into a
-whirl of gayety and pleasure, to which he abandoned
-himself the more readily as it involved no especial
-reproach of conscience. Soon after his arrival he
-volunteered to join an expedition commanded by
-the Duke&rsquo;s son, Lord Arran, to reduce some mutinous
-troops to obedience, and bore himself with so much
-coolness and courage that the viceroy wrote to Sir
-William expressing his satisfaction with young Penn&rsquo;s
-conduct and proposing that he should embrace a
-military career, for which he seemed so well adapted.
-Greatly to William&rsquo;s disappointment, however, the
-admiral refused his consent, having other plans for
-the future. There was also work for him now
-wherein he could utilize his knowledge of law, some
-question having arisen as to the title of the large
-estates recently granted the admiral by Charles the
-Second. The matter having to be settled by law,
-William was intrusted by his father with the trial
-of the case, which he succeeded in winning.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<p>One day while at Cork, near which his father&rsquo;s
-property was situated, he recognized in a shopkeeper
-of whom he was making some purchases one
-of the women who had been present at that never-to-be-forgotten
-meeting held at his father&rsquo;s house
-by Thomas Loe. Much pleased at thus discovering
-an old acquaintance, the conversation naturally
-turned to religious subjects, and on William&rsquo;s expressing
-the wish that he might again see and hear the
-famous preacher, the Quakeress informed him that
-Loe was then living in Cork and would hold one of
-his usual meetings the following day. It is needless
-to say that young Penn was present on that occasion
-and his Oxford experience was repeated. Loe&rsquo;s
-sermon seemed aimed directly at him, for it was
-on &ldquo;the faith that overcometh the world and the
-faith that is overcome by the world.&rdquo; As the first
-part of the sermon, wherein the preacher depicted
-with glowing enthusiasm the splendid fruits of that
-faith that overcometh, awoke in the young man&rsquo;s
-heart memories of the true peace and happiness that
-had been his so long as he had remained true to his
-beliefs, so the second part, dealing with the faith that
-succumbs to worldly temptations, fell like blows upon
-his conscience. Bitter remorse for his frivolous life
-of the last few years overwhelmed him, and Loe, to
-whom he presented himself at the close of the meeting,
-perceiving his state of mind, did not fail to
-strengthen the effect of his discourse by the most
-solemn exhortations.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>For a time filial duty and worldly ambition struggled
-against the voice of awakened conscience, but
-the latter finally triumphed. Penn now became a
-regular attendant at the Quaker meetings and
-belonged, in heart at least, to the persecuted sect.
-In September, 1667, while present at one of these
-meetings, usually held with as much secrecy as
-possible, in order to avoid the jeers of the rabble, the
-place was suddenly invaded by order of the mayor
-and all the participants arrested. Finding the son
-of so distinguished a personage as Sir William Penn
-among the prisoners, the astonished official offered
-to release him at once if he would promise not to
-repeat the offence, but Penn refused to enjoy any
-advantages over his companions and went with
-them to prison. While there he wrote to the Earl of
-Orrery, complaining of the injustice of his imprisonment,
-since the practice of religious worship could
-be called neither a criminal offence nor a disturbance
-of the peace. On receipt of this letter an order
-was given for his immediate release, but the report
-that he had joined the Quakers quickly spread,
-calling forth both derision and indignation among
-his friends at court.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<p>When this rumor reached the admiral, who feared
-nothing so much as ridicule, he promptly ordered
-his son to join him in London. Finding him still in
-the dress of a gentleman with sword and plume, he
-felt somewhat reassured and began to hope that after
-all he might have been misinformed, but the next
-day, when he took William to task for keeping his
-hat on in his presence, the youth frankly confessed
-that he had become a Quaker. Threats and arguments
-proving alike useless, the admiral then gave
-him an hour&rsquo;s time to consider whether he would
-not at least remove his hat before the King and the
-Duke of York, that his future prospects and position
-at court might not be ruined. But William&rsquo;s resolution
-had been fully matured during his imprisonment
-at Cork, and his conversion was a serious matter
-of conscience. He was forced to admit to himself
-therefore that such a concession would be a violation
-of his principles, and announced at the end of the
-time that it would be impossible for him to comply
-with his father&rsquo;s wishes. At this the admiral&rsquo;s
-hitherto restrained anger burst all bounds. Infuriated
-because all his plans and ambitions for the future
-were baffled by what seemed to him a mere notion,
-he heaped abuse and reproaches on his son and
-finally ordered him from the house with threats of
-disinheritance.</p>
-<p>This was a severe test of Penn&rsquo;s religious convictions.
-Not only was he passionately devoted to his
-mother, on whose sympathy and support he could
-always count, but he also had the deepest respect
-and regard for his father, in spite of their widely
-different views, but his conscience demanded the
-sacrifice and he made it, leaving his home and all
-his former associations. Now that the die was cast
-he laid aside his worldly dress and openly professed
-himself as belonging to the Friends, as they were
-called, who welcomed him with open arms. It
-would have fared ill with him, however, accustomed
-as he was to a life of affluence and ease, had it not
-been for his mother, who provided him with money
-from time to time as she found an opportunity.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p>It was not long, however, before the admiral
-relented, owing chiefly to her efforts in his behalf,
-and allowed him to return home, though still refusing
-to see or hold any communication with him. It
-must indeed have been a crushing blow to the proud
-and ambitious man of the world to have his son and
-heir travelling about the country as a poor preacher,
-for it was about this time, 1668, that William first
-began to preach. He also utilized his learning and
-talents by writing in defence of the new doctrines he
-had embraced. One of these publications, entitled
-&ldquo;The Sandy Foundation Shaken,&rdquo; attracted much
-attention. In it he cleverly attempted to prove that
-certain fundamental doctrines of the established
-church were contrary to Scripture&mdash;a heresy for
-which the Bishop of London had him imprisoned.
-Indeed his malicious enemies went so far as to
-claim that Penn had dropped a letter at the time of
-his arrest, written by himself and containing treasonable
-matter, but although his innocence on this point
-was soon established, he was forced, nevertheless, to
-remain for nine months in the Tower. Even the
-King, to whom Sir William appealed on his son&rsquo;s
-behalf, did not dare to intervene for fear of increasing
-the suspicion, in which he already stood, of being an
-enemy to the church. All he could do was to send
-the court chaplain to visit Penn and urge him to
-make amends to the irate Bishop, who was determined
-he should publicly retract his published statements
-or end his days in prison. But this the young
-enthusiast refused to do, replying with the spirit of
-a martyr that his prison should be his grave before
-he would renounce his just opinions; that for his
-conscience he was responsible to no man.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<p>This period of enforced idleness was by no means
-wasted, however. While at the Tower he wrote
-&ldquo;No Cross, No Crown,&rdquo; perhaps the best known and
-most popular of all his works, wherein for his own
-consolation as well as that of his persecuted brethren
-he explained the need for all true Christians to bear
-the cross. Another, called &ldquo;Innocence with her
-Open Face,&rdquo; further expounded certain disputed
-passages in the Holy Book that had shared his imprisonment.
-The manly firmness and courage with
-which Penn bore his long confinement without allowing
-his newly adopted beliefs to be shaken forced
-universal respect and sympathy and even softened
-his father&rsquo;s wrath at last. The admiral himself
-had been having troubles. False accusations made
-against him by his enemies had so preyed on his
-mind that his health had given way, and he had been
-forced to resign his post in the admiralty and retire
-to private life. He visited his son several times in
-prison, and his appeals to the Duke of York finally
-secured William&rsquo;s release, without the recantation
-demanded by the Bishop. Further residence in
-London at that time being undesirable, however, he
-went back to his father&rsquo;s estate in Ireland. Here
-he labored unceasingly for the liberation of his
-friends in Cork, who were still languishing in prison,
-and at last had the joy of seeing his efforts crowned
-with success by securing their pardon from the
-Duke of Ormond.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<p>At the end of eight months he returned again to
-England at the wish of his father, whose rapidly
-failing health made him long for his eldest son. He
-had fully relented toward him by this time and a
-complete reconciliation now took place, greatly to
-the joy of all parties. But the year 1670, which
-brought this happiness to Penn, was also one of trial
-for him, owing to the revival of the law against
-dissenters, as all who differed from the doctrines of
-the established church were called, declaring assemblies
-of more than five persons for religious purposes
-unlawful and making offenders punishable by heavy
-fines or even banishment. Among the thousands
-thus deprived of liberty and property, being at the
-mercy of the meanest informer, one of the first to
-suffer was William Penn.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<p>On the fourteenth of August, 1670, the Quakers
-found their usual place of meeting in London closed
-and occupied by soldiery. When Penn arrived on
-the scene with his friend William Mead he attempted
-to address the assembled crowd, urging them to disperse
-quietly and offer no resistance, which would
-be quite useless. But as soon as he began to speak
-both he and Mead were arrested and taken to
-prison by warrants from the mayor of London for
-having attended a proscribed meeting and furthermore
-caused a disturbance of the peace. The prisoners
-were tried before a jury on September third.
-Although the three witnesses brought against them
-could produce no testimony to confirm the charge,
-Penn voluntarily confessed that he had intended to
-preach and claimed it as a sacred right. In spite of
-all the indignities and abuse permitted by the court,
-he pleaded his cause so stoutly and so eloquently
-that the jury pronounced a verdict of not guilty.
-This was far from pleasing to the judges, who were
-bent on having Penn punished, so the jury were
-sent back to reconsider, and when they persisted
-were locked up for two days without food or water
-and threatened with starvation unless a verdict were
-reached which could be accepted by the court.
-Even this proving ineffectual they were fined for
-their obstinacy, and refusing to pay these fines were
-sent to prison, while Penn and his friend Mead,
-instead of being released, were still kept in confinement
-for refusing to pay a fine which had been arbitrarily
-imposed on them for contempt of court.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<p>The admiral, however, whose approaching end
-made him more and more anxious to have his son
-at liberty, sent privately and paid both fines, thus
-securing the release of both prisoners. Penn found
-his father greatly changed. The once proud and
-ambitious man had experienced the hollowness of
-worldly things and longed for death. &ldquo;I am weary
-of the world,&rdquo; he said to William shortly before his
-death. &ldquo;I would not live over another day of my
-life even if it were possible to bring back the past.
-Its temptations are more terrible than death.&rdquo; He
-charged his children, all of whom were gathered
-about him, &ldquo;Let nothing tempt you to wrong your
-conscience; thus shall you find an inward peace that
-will prove a blessing when evil days befall.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He talked much with William, who doubtless did
-not fail to impress upon his dying father the comfort
-of a firm religious faith, and before he died expressed
-his entire approval of the simple form of worship
-adopted by his eldest and favorite son. Sir William
-died on the sixteenth of September, 1670. Shortly
-before the end he sent messages to the King and to
-the Duke of York with the dying request that they
-would act as guardians to his son, whom he foresaw
-would stand greatly in need of friends and protectors
-in the trials to which his faith would expose him.
-Wealth he would not lack, for the admiral left an
-estate yielding an annual income of about fifteen
-hundred pounds, besides a claim on the royal exchequer
-for fifteen thousand pounds, which sum he
-had loaned at various times to the King and his
-brother.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="h2line1">Chapter III</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">Penn&rsquo;s Third Imprisonment&mdash;His Happy Marriage&mdash;Fresh Persecutions&mdash;Visits to Germany&mdash;Quaker Emigration</span></h2>
-<p>After his father&rsquo;s death Penn became more
-absorbed than ever in his chosen mission
-of spreading the gospel as interpreted
-by Fox, which seemed to him the only true
-form of religion. The restraint he had hitherto felt
-obliged to impose on himself in this respect, out of
-deference to his father&rsquo;s prejudices, was now no
-longer necessary and he was free to follow the dictates
-of his soul. But he was soon to suffer the consequences
-of having drawn upon himself the displeasure
-of the court by his bold defence during the recent
-trial, and still more by a pamphlet issued soon after
-his father&rsquo;s death in which he fearlessly denounced
-the unjust and arbitrary action of the judges
-not only toward the accused, but also toward the
-jury. Just before the new year of 1671 Penn was
-again arrested on the charge of having held unlawful
-meetings and was sentenced to six months&rsquo; imprisonment
-at Newgate, during which time he wrote several
-important works, chiefly urging the necessity
-of liberty of conscience in England.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>After his release Penn made a journey to Holland
-and Germany, whither many of the Quakers had fled
-to escape the continual persecutions to which they
-were subjected in their own country. Others had
-crossed the ocean to seek in America an abode where
-they could live without hinderance according to their
-convictions, and the letters written by these drew
-large numbers to this land of promise; for in spite
-of the hardships of the voyage thither, the emigrants
-drew such glowing pictures of the beauty and fertility
-of the country and the happiness of enjoying religious
-worship undisturbed as could not fail to appeal to
-their unfortunate brethren so sorely in need of this
-blessing.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<p>During his travels Penn had seen many of these
-letters and heard the subject of emigration freely discussed,
-and gradually he formed a plan which indeed
-had been the dream of his youth, although there had
-then seemed no prospect of its ever being realized.
-This plan, however, was forced into the background
-for a time by an event of more personal importance;
-namely, his betrothal to Guglielma Maria Springett,
-daughter of Sir William Springett of Sussex, who
-had greatly distinguished himself as a colonel in
-the parliamentary army and died during the civil
-wars at an early age. His widow and her three
-children, of whom Guli, the youngest, was born
-shortly after her father&rsquo;s death, had retired to the
-village of Chalfont in Buckinghamshire, where she
-afterward married Isaac Pennington, one of the most
-prominent of the early Quakers. It was while
-visiting Friend Pennington at his home in Chalfont
-that Penn met and fell in love with the charming
-Guli, who willingly consented to bestow her hand on
-this stalwart young friend of her stepfather, whose
-belief she shared. The marriage took place in 1672
-and proved one of lasting happiness on both sides.
-Conjugal bliss did not divert Penn from his sacred
-calling, however, for we find him soon on his travels
-again, with his faithful Guli, who accompanied him
-everywhere until the birth of their first child made
-it no longer possible. This was a son, to whom they
-gave the name of Springett, for his grandfather.
-But even the joys of fatherhood could not confine
-Penn to his home, now doubly happy. He travelled
-about the country constantly, either alone or with
-other distinguished Friends, and was so active both
-as a preacher and as a writer that he soon became
-known as the &ldquo;sword&rdquo; of the society.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p>The year 1673 brought fresh persecutions to the
-Quakers through the passage by Parliament of the
-so-called Test Act, excluding all dissenters from
-holding office of any kind under the crown, which
-King Charles had been forced to sign, much against
-his will, since it also applied to Catholics. As the
-Quakers were looked upon as among the worst
-enemies of the established church, not only on
-account of their extreme candor and boldness, but
-also for their contempt of all outward forms of worship,
-their day of trial was not long delayed. George
-Fox was one of the first victims, and in order to secure
-his release Penn once more made his appearance at
-court after an interval of five years. His guardian
-and protector, the Duke of York, received him most
-graciously, reproached him for his long absence, and
-promised to use his influence with the King in Fox&rsquo;s
-behalf. He also agreed to do all in his power to put
-an end to the oppressive persecution of the Friends,
-and dismissed Penn with the assurance that he would
-be glad to see him at any time or be of any service
-to him. The promised intercession, however, was
-either forgotten or without avail, for the merciless
-enactments against dissenters of all kinds continued
-as before and filled all the prisons in the country.
-Little wonder that their thoughts turned to emigration,
-in which some of their brethren had already
-taken refuge. For deep-rooted as is the Englishman&rsquo;s
-attachment to his native land, even patriotism
-must yield to that inborn love of freedom and the
-higher demand of the spirit for liberty of conscience.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<p>To Penn especially this idea appealed with irresistible
-force now that he had at last given up hope
-of ever securing these rights in England. But
-whither? Not in Holland or Germany was to be
-found the longed-for freedom. Refugees in those
-countries were scarcely less oppressed and persecuted
-than at home. It was across the sea that Penn&rsquo;s
-thoughts flew, to the silent primeval forests of the
-New World, where no tyrannical power yet held
-sway; where every man was the builder of his own
-fortune and the master of his destiny, unfettered by
-iron-bound laws and customs; where a still virgin
-Nature, adorned with all the charms of a favored
-clime, invited to direct communion with the Creator
-of all things and inspired a peace of mind impossible
-to secure elsewhere. There was the place to found
-the commonwealth of which he had dreamed. All
-that as a boy he had heard from his father&rsquo;s lips
-of that wondrous new Paradise beyond the seas; all
-that as a youth with his intense longing for freedom
-his fancy had painted of such an ideal community;
-all that as a man he had learned from the letters
-of emigrants who had already reached this land of
-promise, all this combined to create an inspiring
-vision that ever unfolded fresh beauties to his mind.
-And when, in 1676, Penn was unexpectedly brought
-into actual contact with this country, no doubt it
-seemed to him like the finger of God pointing out to
-him the land of his dreams.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>In that year Charles the Second, who had already
-disposed of various English conquests and possessions
-in North America, made over to his brother James,
-Duke of York, the province of New Netherlands,
-ceded to him by the Dutch after their defeat in 1665.
-This was that fertile tract of country lying between
-the Delaware and Connecticut Rivers, where the
-Dutch West Indian Trading Company had already
-made some settlements. The Duke of York kept
-only a part of this territory, however; that which was
-named for him, New York. The territory between
-the Hudson and Delaware Rivers he gave in fee to
-two noblemen, Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret,
-the latter of whom, having been formerly
-governor of the channel island of Jersey lying off
-the French coast, called his part New Jersey. Both
-these provinces granted full freedom of government
-and of belief to all sects&mdash;a matter not so much
-of principle perhaps as of policy, to attract thither
-victims of the penal laws in England, for the greater
-the number of colonists who settled in these still
-sparsely populated territories, the more their value
-and their revenues would increase. Nor were these
-calculations unfounded. Hundreds of Puritans,
-among whom were many Quakers, took advantage
-of this opportunity to seek new homes, and their
-industry and perseverance soon brought the land to
-a state of most promising productiveness. Finding
-the care of these distant possessions burdensome,
-however, Lord Berkeley sold his share for a thousand
-pounds to one Edward Billing through his agent
-John Fenwick. Some dispute concerning the matter
-having arisen between these two men, both of whom
-were Quakers, Penn was chosen to settle the controversy
-and decided in favor of Fenwick, who had
-emigrated with a large party of Friends to the coast
-of Delaware and founded the town of Salem.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>Penn&rsquo;s connection with the American province
-did not end here. Billing, having become embarrassed
-in his affairs, was forced to resign his interest
-in the territory to his creditors, who at his
-request appointed Penn as one of the administrators.
-This office, though not altogether agreeable to him,
-he felt obliged to accept in the interest of the many
-Quakers already settled there; but if his model
-community were to be founded there, he must have
-a free hand and not be hampered by any regulations
-or restrictions which might be made by Sir George
-Carteret as joint owner of the province of New Jersey.
-He therefore directed his efforts to securing a division
-of the territory, in which he finally succeeded, Carteret
-taking the eastern part, while the western, being sold
-to the highest bidder for the benefit of Billing&rsquo;s creditors,
-came into the sole possession of the Quakers.</p>
-<p>For this new State of West New Jersey, Penn
-drew up a constitution, the chief provision of which
-was the right of free worship and liberty of conscience.
-The legislative power was placed almost entirely in
-the hands of the people, to be exercised by chosen
-representatives, while all matters of law and justice
-were intrusted to a judiciary the members of which
-were to serve for a period of not more than two years.
-Copies of this constitution were printed and widely
-circulated among the Quakers, together with a full
-description of the soil, climate, and natural products
-of the new colony. The result was amazing. Penn&rsquo;s
-home, then at Worminghurst in Sussex, was literally
-besieged by would-be emigrants seeking for information,
-in spite of the fact that in these published
-pamphlets he had strongly urged that no one should
-leave his native land without sufficient cause and
-not merely from idle curiosity or love of gain. Two
-companies were now organized to assist in the work
-of emigration. The first ship carried over two
-hundred and thirty colonists, and two others soon
-following, it became necessary to establish at once
-a provisional government, consisting of Penn himself
-with three other members chosen from the two
-companies.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p>One of the first acts of the settlers, after safe arrival
-in the New World, was to arrive at an amicable
-understanding with the native tribes by paying
-them a good price for the land they had occupied or
-claimed for their hunting grounds. This was quite
-a new experience to the Indians, who had hitherto
-met with only violence and robbery from the white
-men&mdash;treatment for which they had usually taken
-bloody revenge. They willingly consented, therefore,
-to bargain with these peaceful strangers, so different
-from any they had yet seen. &ldquo;You are our
-brothers,&rdquo; they declared in their broken English,&rdquo; and
-we will live with you as brothers. There shall be a
-broad path on which you and we will travel together.
-If an Englishman falls asleep on this pathway the
-Indian shall go softly by and say, &lsquo;He sleeps, disturb
-him not!&rsquo; The path shall be made smooth that no
-foot may stumble upon it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<p>It was no small advantage to these early settlers,
-struggling against hardships and privations to make
-a home in the wilderness, to be at peace with the
-natives and have nothing to fear from their enmity.
-Often indeed, when threatened with want or danger,
-they were supplied with the necessities of life by the
-grateful Indians, who knew how to value the friendship
-and honesty of their new neighbors.</p>
-<p>Thus West New Jersey bade fair to develop into a
-favorable place for Penn to found that ideal Commonwealth
-of which he had so long dreamed. But in
-the preoccupations of this new enterprise Penn did
-not lose sight of the duties that lay nearest to him.
-Hearing that the Friends he had formerly visited in
-Holland and Germany were anxious to learn from
-his own lips of the settlement in New Jersey, he
-decided to make another journey to those countries,
-the more so as it was important to secure for the new
-colony as many as possible of the German artisans,
-who at that time held a high reputation for skill and
-industry.</p>
-<p>Penn was also especially desirous of making the
-acquaintance of a noble lady whom Robert Barclay
-had first interested in the Quakers and whose influence
-would be of the utmost importance to the
-members of that persecuted sect in Germany. This
-was the Princess Elizabeth of the Rhine, daughter
-of the Elector Palatine Frederick the Fifth, afterward
-King of Bohemia. She was closely connected with
-England, her mother having been a daughter of
-King James the First, and was deeply interested,
-therefore, in all that concerned that country. At this
-time she was living at Herford in Westphalia and was
-distinguished not only for her learning, but still more
-for the benevolence and sincere piety that made her
-the friend and protectress of all persecuted Christians
-of whatever sect. She had learned from Robert
-Barclay to feel the greatest respect and admiration
-for the Quaker form of belief, and much was hoped
-from her protection.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<p>In 1677, therefore, Penn again sailed for Holland
-with George Fox, Robert Barclay, and George Keith,
-all prominent members of the Society of Friends, in
-a vessel the captain of which had served under
-Admiral Penn. Rotterdam, Leyden, Haarlem, and
-Amsterdam were visited in succession and large
-meetings held, there being many Quakers in each of
-these cities. At Amsterdam George Fox was left
-behind to attend a general assembly or conclave,
-where questions of importance to the Society were
-to be settled, while Penn and his other two companions
-went on to Herford. They were most kindly
-received by the Princess Elizabeth, who not only
-permitted them to hold several public meetings, but
-also invited them frequently to her own apartments
-for religious converse, owing to which she finally
-became a member of the sect herself.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<p>Robert Barclay now returned to Amsterdam to
-join Fox, but Penn, accompanied by Keith, who was
-almost as proficient as himself in the German language,
-journeyed on by way of Paderborn and Cassel
-to Frankfort-on-the-Main, where Penn preached with
-great effect, winning over many influential persons
-to his own belief. From Frankfort the two Quaker
-apostles went up along the Rhine to Griesheim near
-Worms, where a small Quaker community had been
-formed. Here Penn&rsquo;s plan for founding a trans-atlantic
-State for the free worship of their religion
-was received with the greatest enthusiasm, and large
-numbers did indeed afterward emigrate to New
-Jersey, where they took an important place in the
-colony, being among the first to condemn and abolish
-the slavery then existing in America, and established
-a reputation for German worth and integrity beyond
-the seas.</p>
-<p>On his return to Cologne, Penn found a letter
-from the Princess Elizabeth urging him to go to
-M&uuml;hlheim to visit the Countess of Falkenstein, of
-whose piety she had already told him. In endeavoring
-to carry out this request of his royal patroness,
-however, Penn and his friend met with a misadventure.
-At the gates of the castle they encountered
-the Countess&rsquo; father, a rough, harsh man with small
-respect for religion of any sort. He roundly abused
-them for not taking off their hats to him, and on
-learning that they were Quakers, he had them taken
-into custody and escorted beyond the boundaries of
-his estates by a guard. Here they were left alone
-in the darkness, at the edge of a great forest, not
-knowing where they were or which way to turn.
-After much wandering about they finally reached
-the town of Duisburg, but the gates were closed and
-in spite of the lateness of the season they were forced
-to remain outside till morning.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p>From Amsterdam Penn went to join Fox again
-at Friesland, improving this opportunity to make
-another satisfactory visit to Herford, and parting
-from the noble Princess as a warm friend with whom
-he afterward enjoyed a frequent correspondence.
-Not till early in the winter did the four friends
-return to England, and the stormy passage, together
-with his nocturnal adventure at Duisburg, so affected
-Penn&rsquo;s health that for some time he was obliged to
-submit himself to the care of his devoted wife,
-especially as the importunities of prospective emigrants
-gave him little chance to recuperate.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="h2line1">Chapter IV</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">The Popish Plot&mdash;Settlement of Virginia&mdash;The Royal Cession to Penn&mdash;Christening of Pennsylvania&mdash;Outlines of Penn&rsquo;s Constitution</span></h2>
-<p>The year 1678 seemingly opened with brighter
-prospects for those who had suffered so severely
-in the past for their religious beliefs.
-The clearest sighted members of Parliament
-must have realized the detriment to England when
-such numbers of peaceable citizens, blameless in
-every respect save for their form of worship, were
-forced to abandon their native land, taking with
-them their possessions and their industries, and must
-have realized that such persecutions must end.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<p>Penn, in spite of being a Quaker, had won the
-esteem of all classes by his high character and his
-ability and enjoyed the confidence of some of the
-most influential personages in the kingdom. Hearing
-of this change of attitude adopted by Parliament,
-he laid aside for the time being all thoughts of his
-transatlantic commonwealth and gave himself up to
-the work of securing recognition of his great principle
-of liberty of conscience. Profiting by the favor in
-which he stood with the Duke of York, he endeavored
-to obtain through him the submission to Parliament
-of an Act of Toleration. The Duke looked favorably
-on the plan, but being himself a member of the
-Church of Rome, maintained that such a law should
-not be restricted to Protestant dissenters only, but
-apply also to Catholics. All seemed to be going
-well and Penn&rsquo;s efforts bade fair to be crowned with
-success, when suddenly an event occurred which
-deferred for years the passage of this act and added
-fresh fuel to the fires of persecution. This was the
-invention of the famous Popish Plot by an infamous
-wretch named Titus Oates. Formerly a clergyman
-in the Anglican Church, he had been deprived of his
-living because of his shameful excesses and fled to
-Spain, where he joined the Jesuits. Expelled from
-this order also for improper conduct, he revenged
-himself by turning informer and swore to the existence
-of a conspiracy among the Jesuits to massacre
-all the prominent Protestants and establish the
-Catholic religion in England. Even the King, for
-permitting the persecution of Catholics in his kingdom,
-was not to be spared, nor the Duke of York,
-who was not credited with much real devotion to
-that faith.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<p>It is doubtful whether there ever was any real
-foundation for this atrocious charge based by Oates
-upon letters and papers intrusted to him by the
-Jesuits and which he had opened from curiosity.
-Nevertheless the story was generally credited in
-spite of the absurdity of the statements of such a
-worthless wretch, and aroused the wildest excitement
-throughout the country, in consequence of which
-the established church, alarmed for its safety, enforced
-more rigorously than ever the edicts against all
-dissenters. Seeing his hopes of religious freedom in
-England once more fading, Penn bent his efforts the
-more resolutely toward the establishment of a haven
-in America. He had long ago decided the principles
-by which his new commonwealth was to be governed;
-namely, the equality of all men in the eyes of the
-law, full liberty of conscience and the free worship
-of religion, self-government by the people, and the
-inviolability of personal liberty as well as of personal
-property&mdash;a form of government which, if justly
-and conscientiously carried out, must create indeed
-an ideal community such as the world had never yet
-seen. Nor was it an impossibility, as was proved
-by the gratifying success of the New Jersey colony,
-where a part of these principles, at least, had already
-been put into practice.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
-<p>But where was this model State to be founded? It
-must be on virgin soil, where no government of any
-kind already existed, and where the new ideas could
-be instituted from the beginning. As the most
-suitable spot for this purpose Penn&rsquo;s glance had
-fixed upon a tract of land lying west of New Jersey
-and north of the royal province of Maryland, which
-had been founded in 1632 by a Catholic nobleman,
-Lord Baltimore, as a refuge for persecuted members
-of his own faith, but which also offered liberty to
-those of other sects. The only occupants of this
-territory were a few scattered Dutch and Swedish
-settlers, but they were so small in number and so
-widely separated that they need scarcely be taken
-into consideration as possible obstacles to Penn&rsquo;s
-plans after the arrival of the class of colonists he
-favored in numbers sufficient to populate this wide
-extent of land. For the rest the country was still
-an unbroken wilderness, where one could wander for
-days hearing no sound but the songs of the countless
-birds that filled the vast forests. As to the natives,
-in spite of their undeniable cruelty and savage
-cunning when provoked or wronged, it was quite
-possible to make friends and allies of them by kindness
-and fair treatment, as the New Jersey settlers
-had already learned.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<p>This was the territory of which Penn now determined
-to secure possession if possible, a task which
-promised no great difficulty, as the English crown
-claimed sovereignty over all that portion of North
-America lying between the thirty-fourth and the
-forty-fifth degrees north latitude, on the strength of
-the discovery of its coast line by English navigators.
-King James the First had given a patent for part
-of these possessions to an English company, the
-grant including all the land from the Atlantic to
-the Pacific, and some attempt had been made to
-found colonies and develop the riches of the country,
-but later this company was divided into two, one
-taking the northern portion, the other the southern.
-This latter, called the London Company, lost no time
-in fitting up a ship which entered Chesapeake Bay
-in 1607, sailed up the James River, and landed its
-passengers at what was afterward called Jamestown,
-the first English colony in America. These colonists
-were soon followed by others, and by the year 1621
-the settlement had so increased that the London
-Company, which had retained the right of ownership,
-exercised through a governor, granted a written
-constitution to the province, which they named
-Virginia. In 1624, however, this company, having
-some disagreement with King James, was dissolved
-and Virginia became the property of the crown.
-This being followed by the voluntary withdrawal of
-the parties owning the northern half of the territory,
-the tract between the fortieth and forty-eighth
-degrees, known as New England, was then deeded
-by James to the Plymouth Company, which made
-no attempt at colonization itself, but sold land to
-others, part of which thus came into possession of
-the Puritan emigrants.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<p>In 1639, however, during the reign of Charles the
-First, their charter expired and the lands still belonging
-to them, including what were afterward the
-States of Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey,
-again reverted to the crown. The district lying
-between the Delaware and Hudson Rivers had been
-claimed by the Dutch&mdash;Hudson, the English navigator
-who discovered it, having been then in the
-service of Holland; and here between Delaware Bay
-and the Connecticut River they had founded their
-colony of New Netherlands. In 1655 the adjoining
-territory on the west bank of the Delaware, comprising
-the present State of Delaware and the southern
-part of Pennsylvania, had been bought from the
-Indians by a Swedish trading company at the instigation
-of King Gustavus Adolphus and a settlement
-founded under the name of New Sweden. Not
-proving the commercial success hoped for, this was
-afterward abandoned. England&rsquo;s acquisition of New
-Netherlands as the prize of her naval victories over
-Holland, the formation of the colonies of New York
-and New Jersey, the possession of the latter by the
-Quakers and the drafting of its constitution by
-William Penn,&mdash;all these have been related in the
-preceding chapter.</p>
-<p>The territory which Penn now had in mind, therefore,
-had belonged to the crown since the dissolution
-of the Plymouth Company and was again at the
-disposal of the King. As to Penn&rsquo;s confidence in
-his ability to obtain possession of it without difficulty,
-it will be remembered that he had inherited from his
-father a claim of fifteen thousand pounds against the
-royal exchequer. As neither the King nor the Duke
-of York were able to repay this sum, the unpaid
-interest on which, during the ten years since the
-admiral&rsquo;s death, amounted to more than a thousand
-pounds, Penn felt sure the King would welcome a
-proposal to cede this tract of land in America as
-payment of his claim&mdash;certainly a simple method
-of releasing himself from this large debt.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<p>But the affair was not to be so easily settled after
-all, for the time was past when the sovereign had
-absolute power to dispose of crown possessions as he
-would, the privy council now having a voice in the
-matter, and to obtain their consent was difficult,
-Penn&rsquo;s ideas in regard to the government of this new
-State being regarded not only as preposterous, but
-also as dangerous to itself and to the crown. He was
-urged, therefore, by his friends to make no mention
-of his real purpose in his petition to the King, lest
-he be forced to renounce his long-cherished plan.
-Although he accepted this prudent advice, there were
-still many obstacles to overcome, owing to the difficulty
-of defining any exact boundaries in that trackless
-wilderness and the precautions necessary to
-incorporate in the patent all possible security for
-the maintenance of crown prerogatives.</p>
-<p>While the matter was still before the council and
-the result by no means certain, Penn took advantage
-of an opportunity which offered itself of becoming a
-joint owner of New Jersey, by which, even should
-his petition be refused, his plans could still be carried
-out in that province, if only on a small scale. Sir
-George Carteret, tired of his colonial possessions,
-offered to sell his ownership, and Penn, with a number
-of others, concluded the purchase. Again the public
-confidence in him and his enterprises was shown by
-the haste with which hundreds of families, especially
-from Scotland, took advantage of the liberal terms
-offered to emigrants in his published prospectus
-and enrolled their names as future colonists. At
-length, after much deliberation, and owing largely
-to the influence of the Duke of York, to whom Penn
-had again applied for assistance, the council agreed to
-comply with his proposal, partly also, perhaps, from
-the fear that in case they refused Penn might insist
-upon the payment of his debt, for which at the
-moment no means were available.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>On the twenty-fourth of February, 1681, the King
-signed the deed granting to Penn the absolute ownership
-of all that territory extending from the Delaware
-River to Ohio on the west and as far as Lake Erie
-on the north, covering an area equal to the whole of
-England, and the fifth of March, at a special meeting
-of the privy council, this patent was delivered to
-Penn in the presence of the King. As evidence of
-His Majesty&rsquo;s high good-humor on this occasion, a
-popular anecdote is told. As Penn, according to the
-Quaker custom, neither took off his hat on the King&rsquo;s
-entrance nor made the usual obeisance, Charles
-quietly removed his own hat, although it was the
-royal prerogative to remain covered on entering an
-assembly of any kind. To Penn&rsquo;s astonished query
-as to the reason for this unusual proceeding he replied
-smilingly, &ldquo;It is the custom at court for only one
-person to remain covered.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<p>Another proof of the King&rsquo;s satisfaction at thus
-being freed from his indebtedness to Penn was shown
-in choosing a name for the new province. Penn at
-first suggested New Wales, on account of the mountainous
-character of the country, but one of the
-councillors, who was a Welshman and none too well
-disposed toward the Friends, objected to the idea of
-giving the name of his native land to an American
-Quaker colony. His new domain being as thickly
-wooded as it was hilly, Penn then proposed Sylvania,
-which met with general approval, the King, however,
-insisting that Penn&rsquo;s own name should be placed
-before it, making Pennsylvania or &ldquo;Penn&rsquo;s woodland.&rdquo;
-In vain he protested that this would be
-looked on as vanity in him. Charles would hear of
-no denial, declaring good-naturedly that he would
-take the whole responsibility on himself. The name
-of Pennsylvania was inserted in the patent, and
-Pennsylvania it remained.</p>
-<p>This document is still in existence, carefully preserved
-among the State archives. It is written in old
-English script on a roll of stout parchment, each line
-underscored with red ink and the margins adorned
-with drawings, the first page bearing the head of
-King Charles the Second. It was a proud and joyful
-moment for Penn when he received this deed
-from the King&rsquo;s hand, marking the first and most
-important step toward the realization of his dreams.
-&ldquo;It is a gift from God,&rdquo; he declared reverently. &ldquo;He
-will bless it and make it the seed of a great nation.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<p>The patent conferred upon the new owner the
-right to divide the province into counties and municipalities;
-to incorporate towns and boroughs; to
-make laws with the people&rsquo;s consent; to impose
-taxes for public purposes; to muster troops for the defence
-of the State, and to execute the death sentence
-according to martial law&mdash;all on condition that no
-laws should be made in opposition to those existing
-in England, that the royal impost on all articles of
-commerce should be lawfully paid and allegiance to
-the crown duly observed. In case of failure to comply
-with these conditions the King reserved the right
-to assume control of Pennsylvania in his own person
-until he should be indemnified to the full value of
-the land. Parliament also reserved the right to impose
-taxes on the colonists. By the express desire
-of the Bishop of London it was stipulated that should
-twenty or more of the inhabitants of the province
-desire the services of a clergyman of the established
-church, he should be permitted to dwell among them
-unmolested. Lastly, Penn, the owner, in recognition
-that the land was held in fee of the English
-crown, was to pay an annual tribute to the King of
-England of two bear-skins, with the fifth part of all
-gold and silver found in Pennsylvania at any time.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p>Penn set to work at once upon the task of drawing
-up a constitution for his new colony, &ldquo;with reverence
-before God and good-will toward men,&rdquo; as he states
-in the introduction to this instrument. The sovereign
-power was to be exercised by the governor, Penn
-himself, jointly with the citizens of the commonwealth.
-For legislative purposes a council of seventy-two
-was to be chosen by the people, one-third of
-which number was to retire at the end of every year
-and be replaced by others selected in the same way.
-This council was to frame laws and superintend
-their execution; to maintain the peace and security
-of the province; to promote commerce by the building
-of roads, trading posts, and harbors; to regulate
-the finances; to establish schools and courts of justice
-and generally do all that should be required to promote
-the welfare of the colony. The only prerogative
-claimed by Penn for himself was that he and
-his lawful heirs and successors should remain at the
-head of this council and have the right of three votes
-instead of one.</p>
-<p>In addition to the council of state there was to be
-an assembly which at first was to include all free
-citizens of the State, but later, when their number
-became too large, to consist of not more than five
-hundred members, to be chosen annually. All laws
-made by the council must be submitted for approval
-or rejection to this assembly, which also had the
-right to select candidates for public offices, of whom
-at least half must be accepted by the governor.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<p>These were the outlines of Penn&rsquo;s masterly scheme
-of government, to which were added some forty
-provisional laws to remain in force until such time
-as a council of state could be chosen. These included
-entire freedom of religious belief and worship, any molester
-of which was to be punished as a disturber of the
-peace, and the prohibition of all theatrical performances,
-games of chance, drinking bouts, sports that
-involved bloodshed or the torture of animals&mdash;all, in
-short, that could encourage cruelty, idleness, or godlessness.
-Prisoners must work to earn their support.
-Thieves must refund double the amount stolen or
-work in prison until the sum was made up, and all
-children above the age of twelve years must be
-taught some useful trade or occupation to prevent
-idleness. Many of these provisional laws and regulations
-have remained permanently in force in Pennsylvania,
-the council being unable to substitute
-anything better, and their wisdom has been amply
-proved by the experience of more than two hundred
-years.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="h2line1">Chapter V</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">Description of Penn&rsquo;s Domain&mdash;Negotiations with the Indians by Penn&rsquo;s Agent&mdash;Death of Penn&rsquo;s Mother&mdash;Final Instructions to his Family&mdash;Departure of the Welcome</span></h2>
-<p>This newly acquired territory, which was
-henceforth to absorb all Penn&rsquo;s attention,
-lay to the north of Maryland and west of
-New Jersey, of which Penn was now joint
-owner, reaching from the Delaware River on the east
-to the Ohio on the west, and north as far as Lake
-Erie. The eastern and western boundaries were
-well defined by these two rivers, but on the north
-and south the lines had yet to be agreed upon with
-the owners of the adjoining colonies&mdash;no easy
-matter where the land was largely primeval forest,
-untrodden by human foot save for the Indians who
-traversed it on their hunting expeditions. The
-greater part of the tract was occupied by the various
-ranges of the Allegheny Mountains, whose bare
-rocky peaks offered no very inviting prospect and
-held out few hopes as to a favorable climate. But
-wherever trees could find nourishment for their
-roots, dense forests extended, untouched as yet by
-any axe, while verdant meadows lined the countless
-streams that descended from the mountain heights
-to empty their waters into the Allegheny and Susquehanna
-Rivers which flowed through the middle
-of the State. The only outlet to the ocean was
-through the Delaware River, which opened into
-Delaware Bay, where there was a good harbor.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>The climate of the country was a diversified one.
-While in the mountain regions the winters were
-severe, the eastern slopes toward the Atlantic Ocean,
-as well as those in the northwest toward the Ohio
-River and Lake Erie, enjoyed a temperate climate
-with often great heat in the summer. In these
-regions the soil was rich and fruitful, promising
-bountiful returns to the settler after he had once
-succeeded in clearing the land and making room for
-the plough. The forests, almost impenetrable in
-places with masses of sumach bushes and climbing
-vines, furnished almost every kind of wood already
-known to the English colonists: cedar, cypress, pine,
-and sycamore, as well as the full-blooming tulip tree,
-which flourished in sheltered spots. Game of all
-sorts abounded and the streams were full of fish.
-The most delicious grapes and peaches, chestnuts
-and mulberries grew wild in protected places, and
-flowers of tropical gorgeousness greeted the eyes of
-astonished settlers. The gold and silver of which
-King Charles had been so careful to reserve a share
-were not found in the province, but there was plenty
-of iron and an inexhaustible supply of the finest coal.
-Also there were valuable salt springs, as well as those
-useful materials, lime, slate, and building stone. In
-short, it was a country well fitted to supply every
-need of the settler and offering magnificent prospects
-for the future.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<p>To be sure, it was inhabited by several tribes of
-Indians, chief of which were the Lenni Lennapes in
-the southern part and the Iroquois in the northern,
-but if they were disposed at first to regard with
-suspicion this invasion of their domains, they
-soon found the newcomers fair and honest in their
-dealings with them and willing to pay for the right
-to settle there, like the New Jersey colonists. Indeed
-these semi-savage natives seemed to place little
-value on the permanent possession of the land over
-which they claimed sovereignty. They had no fixed
-abiding place, but roamed about at will, settling down
-for a time where the hunting was especially good or
-the streams promised to fill their nets with fish. So
-long as they were free to hunt and fish as they chose
-and their women had a small piece of open ground
-in which to prepare the maize cakes that served them
-for bread, no hostile attacks were to be feared from
-them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p>Penn himself little suspected that he had received
-an empire in exchange for his claim against the crown,
-nor did he realize as long as he lived the full value
-of his newly acquired territory. The idea of enriching
-himself or his family was as far from his thoughts
-as it had been close to his father&rsquo;s. With him it was
-purely a question of obtaining a home for his ideal
-Commonwealth, and he refused all the offers to purchase
-rights of trade there that poured in upon him
-as soon as the patent had been granted, even though
-he was in great need of money at the time and
-although the sale of such rights was not only perfectly
-legitimate, but no more than any other in his position
-would have done without hesitation. One merchant,
-for instance, offered him six thousand pounds, besides
-two and a half per cent of the yearly profits, for the
-exclusive right to trade in beaver hats between the
-Delaware and Susquehanna Rivers. Penn was resolved
-that trade in his colony should be no more
-restricted than personal liberty or freedom of conscience,
-and the more widely his principles of government
-became known, the larger grew the number
-of would-be emigrants who wished to settle there.
-He soon found himself so overrun with agents wishing
-to consult him as to the sale of lands or the formation
-of trading companies that he scarcely knew which
-way to turn. There was hardly a city in the three
-kingdoms that did not send messengers or petitions,
-while offers came even from Holland and Germany,
-where Penn was so well known.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<p>Emigration companies were also formed for the
-foundation of settlements on a larger scale. To one
-of these, in Frankfort-on-the-Main, Penn deeded a
-tract of fifteen thousand acres along the banks of
-a navigable river, with three hundred acres in the
-interior on which to found the capital of the new
-State. A trading company in Bristol concluded a
-contract for the purchase of twenty thousand acres
-and set to work at once to fit out a ship, while in
-London, Liverpool, and Bristol emigrants gathered
-in such numbers that Penn soon had no fear as to
-the settlement of his colony. Among these, it is
-true, were many adventurers in search of a fortune
-only, which they hoped to make more quickly and
-easily under Penn&rsquo;s form of government than elsewhere.
-But by far the greater number were victims
-of oppression, seeking to escape the endless persecutions
-to which they were subjected at home on
-account of their religious opinions, and taking with
-them little but good resolution and a pair of useful
-hands.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
-<p>Immediately on receiving the patent Penn despatched
-his cousin, Colonel Markham, with three
-ships to take possession of the new province in his
-name, to arrange with Lord Baltimore as to the
-doubtful boundary lines on the south, and above all
-to make friends with the Indians by concluding a
-formal treaty with them for the purchase of such
-lands as they laid claim to. The kindliness of his
-nature made it impossible for him to treat the unfortunate
-natives as other Europeans had done, driving
-them ruthlessly from their own hunting grounds
-wherever the land was worth taking possession of
-and forcing them as far as possible into slavery.
-The Spanish explorers especially, in their insatiable
-thirst for gold, had even robbed them of all the precious
-metals and pearls they had and endeavored
-by the most shameful cruelty to extort from them
-knowledge of the location where they found the
-gold of which their ornaments were made. If they
-offered the slightest resistance or took up arms to
-defend themselves or regain their liberty, they were
-hunted like wild beasts by bloodhounds trained for
-that purpose, or fell in heaps before the murderous
-bullets against which their arrows were of no avail.
-Even the Puritan settlers of New England, who
-should have practised the Christian virtues of justice
-and humanity, were guilty of many acts of cruelty
-and treachery toward the red men, with whom they
-were perpetually at warfare in consequence.</p>
-<p>Penn hoped, by the use of gentler methods, to
-win the confidence of the Indians, who must have
-already discovered from the New Jersey settlers
-that all white men were by no means like those with
-whom they had first come in contact. It was necessary,
-in fact, if his colony were to enjoy permanent
-peace and security, and in spite of the ridicule which
-such humane ideas was likely to evoke, Markham
-was charged with the strictest instructions in this
-regard. He was a bold and determined man, devoted
-to his kinsman Penn, the wisdom and purity of
-whose ideas he fully appreciated in spite of his soldierly
-training. On his arrival in Pennsylvania he
-lost no time in concluding a treaty with the chiefs
-or sachems of the principal tribes, conveying to
-Penn for a fixed sum all lands claimed by them with
-the solemn assurance in his name that no settler
-should ever molest or injure them. The next two
-ships which came over from England brought three
-agents authorized to make further treaties of peace
-and friendship, thus strengthening the work begun
-by Markham, and also an address written by Penn
-himself to be read to the Indians, expressing it as
-his earnest wish &ldquo;by their favor and consent, so to
-govern the land that they might always live together
-as friends and allies.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p>Markham was less fortunate, however, in his
-negotiations with Lord Baltimore concerning the
-doubtful boundary lines, which, if not definitely fixed,
-were likely to prove a source of much contention.
-The existence of a Quaker colony adjoining his own
-province was by no means pleasing to the Catholic
-nobleman, who, if left to himself, would have done all
-in his power to prevent its foundation. The matter
-was only settled by the King&rsquo;s personal interference
-in Penn&rsquo;s behalf, and then only a temporary decision
-was arrived at, the Duke of York&rsquo;s influence having
-finally to be brought to bear before everything could
-be arranged satisfactorily for the future prosperity
-of the new State. Pennsylvania, as already mentioned,
-had but one direct outlet to the Atlantic
-Ocean. Should this be cut off or obstructed at any
-time by enemies, it would be ruinous to the trade of
-the colony. Penn therefore determined to acquire
-if possible a strip of land forming the west shore of
-Delaware Bay on the peninsula extending between
-Delaware and Chesapeake Bays, the possession of
-which was indispensable for the protection of Pennsylvania&rsquo;s
-trading vessels. After much negotiation
-this was accomplished with the Duke of York&rsquo;s aid
-and the sovereign rights to this piece of coast granted
-to Penn and his heirs forever. This removed the
-last obstacle to his undisputed possession of the new
-territory and its successful development, and he was
-now free to cross the Atlantic and assume the government
-in person.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<p>Just at this time, however, a great misfortune
-befell him in the sudden death of his mother, that
-tender guardian of his childhood, friend and mediator
-of his troubled youth, and devoted sharer of the hopes
-and plans of his manhood, whose support and sympathy
-had never failed him. So overwhelmed with
-grief was he by this loss that for a time his health
-was seriously affected and it was many weeks before
-he recovered his peace of mind. This sad event
-also added to Penn&rsquo;s difficulties. Being unwilling
-to take his wife and children with him on this first
-voyage, he had hoped to leave them under his
-mother&rsquo;s wise and experienced guardianship, in which
-case he could have parted from them with good heart,
-feeling sure that all would be well during his absence.
-This was now no longer possible, however, and
-another anxiety was added to his load.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<p>In these days of swift and luxuriously appointed
-steamships, when the voyage from Europe to America
-is so quickly and comfortably made, it seems strange
-to think of regarding it with so much anxiety and
-apprehension; but in Penn&rsquo;s time steamships were
-unknown and travellers had to depend on clumsy
-sailing vessels, entirely at the mercy of the winds,
-while the passage, now made easily in from five to
-seven days, then required at least six weeks, and sometimes,
-with contrary winds, double that. And aside
-from the dangers of such a sea voyage, what unknown
-experiences awaited them in that distant land, where
-homes must be hewed out from the wilderness, where
-privation and hardships of every sort must be endured,
-where death indeed by Indian tomahawk or
-knife was possible at any moment! Under these
-circumstances even so brave and resolute a man as
-William Penn might well feel anxiety over such a
-voyage and its outcome. For a time he did think of
-taking with him the wife and children from whom he
-found it so hard to part, that he might watch over
-them himself; but the giant task awaiting him
-beyond the sea claimed all his mind and strength
-and he feared the care of a family at such a time
-might defeat the whole purpose of his journey, to say
-nothing of his dread of exposing them to the dangers
-and uncertainties of a life of which he had heard
-more than enough from those who had already
-experienced it. But Penn had firm faith in God and
-in the righteousness of a cause which aimed not at
-personal gain but the bodily and spiritual welfare
-of thousands, and which if it succeeded must result
-in the creation of a veritable earthly Paradise. He
-therefore did all that lay in his power to further it
-and left the issue in the hands of Providence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p>Before leaving he made a sort of testament containing
-his parting instruction&rsquo;s to his dear ones, to
-be kept ever before their eyes. In this he laid particular
-stress on the proper education of his children,
-who, if all went well, would one day be called to
-govern the State of Pennsylvania, and charged his
-wife to live as economically as possible in other
-respects, but to spare nothing to this end. The two
-sons, Springett and William, were to be thoroughly
-grounded in all branches of knowledge necessary to
-their future position, especially in agriculture, shipbuilding,
-surveying, and navigation. The only
-daughter, Letty or Letitia, was to receive also a
-suitable training in all domestic affairs. Above
-all, they were to be taught piety and the fear of God
-and to strive with all their strength to attain these
-virtues. &ldquo;Let your hearts be righteous before the
-Lord and put your trust in Him,&rdquo; he concluded;
-&ldquo;then no one will have power to harm or injure you.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<p>Autumn was already approaching before the <i>Welcome</i>,
-which was to carry Penn across the ocean,
-was ready to set sail. It was a fine vessel of three
-hundred tons and larger than most ships crossing
-the Atlantic in those days, but even its capacity
-was taxed to the utmost, for more than a hundred
-colonists, mostly of the wealthier class, were eager to
-make the voyage with the owner of the new province,
-and each had to carry sufficient provisions to last
-possibly for twelve or fourteen weeks. Even then
-many who had been accustomed to a life of ease
-and luxury were forced to content themselves with
-scanty rations lest the supply give out. The quantity
-of luggage of all sorts required by so many persons
-was also no small matter, although no one
-was allowed to carry any material for house fittings,
-such as doors or windows, but Penn himself, who
-also took with him a horse. The hold of the ship
-was full and even the deck lined with chests and boxes
-when at last, on the first of September, 1682, the
-<i>Welcome</i> was ready to start on her journey. As
-soon as Penn had come on board after parting with
-his family, the anchor was lifted and the good ship
-sailed away from Deal, followed by the prayers and
-benedictions of thousands.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>It was already late in the season and a dangerous,
-trying winter voyage was before them, should the
-passage prove a long one. The winds were fair,
-however, and all promised well, when the alarming
-discovery was made that an unmarked and unwelcome
-guest was on board; namely, the smallpox, one
-of the worst diseases that could have broken out,
-since on a crowded vessel it was impossible to prevent
-infection by isolating the patients. At first the epidemic
-seemed so mild it was not thought necessary
-to turn back, but it gradually grew more and more
-malignant and raged to such an extent that for three
-weeks deaths were of daily occurrence and more
-than half of the ship&rsquo;s company were swept away.
-There was no physician of any kind on board, but
-Penn labored heroically to relieve the sufferers,
-placing all his supplies at their disposal, watching
-by their bedsides, and endeavoring to banish by the
-word of God the deadly fear that accompanies contagious
-diseases. But it was of no avail. Day after
-day death continued to claim its toll. After the
-horrors of such an experience, it may be imagined
-with what joy and rapture the first sight of the shores
-of America was hailed by those who had survived
-that terrible nine weeks&rsquo; voyage.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="h2line1">Chapter VI</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">Penn&rsquo;s Arrival&mdash;The Founding of Philadelphia&mdash;First General Assembly&mdash;Building of the &ldquo;Blue Anchor&rdquo;&mdash;The First School and Printing Press</span></h2>
-<p>On the twenty-seventh of October the <i>Welcome</i>
-cast anchor before Newcastle, a small
-village on the strip of land granted to Penn
-by the Duke of York. News of the arrival
-of the vessel quickly spread and the entire population,
-young and old, regardless of nationality, flocked
-to welcome the long-expected governor. English,
-Scotch, and Irish stood side by side with the stolid
-German, the clumsy Hollander, and the fair-haired
-Swede, all eager to behold at last the man in whose
-hands lay the moulding of their future. The native
-children of the wilderness in their strange dress, with
-high fringed moccasins, an eagle or heron&rsquo;s feather
-thrust through the head band, bow in hand, a quiver
-of feathered arrows fastened to the shoulder, also
-flocked to meet him. Who can say which gazed
-with keener interest on the approaching ship flying
-a great English flag from her masthead, the white
-men, who had some idea of what to expect from the
-newcomer, or the redskins, who in spite of their apparently
-calm indifference must have been inwardly
-consumed with curiosity to see what sort of man it
-was in whose name and by whose orders they had
-met with treatment so different from any that had
-hitherto been accorded them by white men. Certainly
-nothing but good-will could have been read
-in the noble features and the earnest, kindly gaze
-of the dignified-looking man who now disembarked
-from the vessel, distinguished only from his companions
-by the broad blue scarf he wore. As he stepped
-ashore on the landing stage and received the greetings
-of his cousin, Markham, a deafening shout burst
-from the assembled throng. Deeply moved, Penn
-bowed in acknowledgment of the tribute, and through
-the tears that glittered in his eyes shone the resolve
-to merit the confidence so spontaneously expressed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>The following day, after he had somewhat recovered
-from the long and trying voyage, a meeting of
-the people was held in the town-hall and the legal
-documents pertaining to the transfer of the tract
-were read aloud, after which a deputy of the Duke
-of York handed to Penn, in the name of his master,
-a flask of water and a small basketful of earth in
-token that the land had been actually delivered over
-to him. The new owner then arose and in his deep
-rich voice addressed the assembly, which listened in
-breathless silence to his words. He told how from
-early youth it had been his dream to found somewhere
-a free State to be governed by the people,
-where full liberty of conscience could be enjoyed and
-the Christian virtues flourish. He explained the
-principles according to which he had drawn up the
-constitution for Pennsylvania, and promised that
-the same laws should be followed in the administration
-of this additional territory which had been
-granted to him, assuring the people that the chief
-power should be exercised by himself only until the
-new constitution could be put into force, during
-which time he would endeavor to wield it to the best
-of his ability for the public good. Lastly he retained
-all existing officials in their positions as proof that
-he harbored no prejudices and was disposed to deal
-fairly in all particulars.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<p>When he had finished speaking a rousing cheer
-testified to the approval of his audience and he was
-unanimously urged to retain the governorship of
-the new territory, making it a part of Pennsylvania.
-This he promised to take into consideration, leaving
-the matter to be decided at the next assembly, which
-was to be held at Upland, a settlement made by the
-Swedes in Delaware, and up to this time the most
-important town in that region. This was now Penn&rsquo;s
-destination, and as he sailed up the Delaware River
-his heart must have thrilled with delight at the fresh
-beauties revealed by each curve of the winding
-stream, until at last the settlement was reached and
-he stepped ashore on his own dominions, his Pennsylvania.
-The spot where Penn first landed is still
-shown, marked by a solitary pine tree.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_75">75</div>
-<p>Here, too, his arrival was hailed with general
-rejoicing. Those who had preceded him to America
-with Markham and done all in their power to carry
-out his plans looked anxiously for his coming to
-better their situation, which truly was in need of
-improvement. They had been received in the most
-friendly way, it is true, by the Swedish settlers, who
-had given them all the assistance possible, but their
-hospitality was unable to afford shelter for all. A
-few, whose means permitted, had managed to bring
-over with them enough lumber to build a small
-house at once, but the majority were forced to live
-in tents or huts made from clay and the branches
-of trees, neither of which offered much protection
-against the severe weather of the winter months.
-Some had even made use of the caves hollowed out
-from the high banks of the Delaware by the Indians
-in former times or dug new ones for themselves,
-finding them a better shelter than any other available.
-It was in one of these caves that the first birth in
-the settlement occurred, and the child, who was
-named John Key, received from Penn the gift of a
-building site in the new town he had planned.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<p>His first care was to establish a permanent location
-for the colonists who had come over with him before
-they should scatter in search of homes, as the previous
-ones had done, regardless of any definite plan.
-Markham was in favor of using Upland, or Chester
-as Penn now called it, as the nucleus of the future
-city. But Penn had made a better choice, in which
-he was supported by Thomas Holme, an experienced
-surveyor whom he had sent out from England and
-who had already thoroughly explored the surrounding
-country. A more favorable spot for the location of
-a great commercial centre could scarcely have been
-found than the one thus selected. It was at the
-junction of the Schuylkill and Delaware Rivers,
-where the high banks of the latter ensured a safe
-harbor, while near by Holme had discovered quarries
-containing an inexhaustible supply of the finest
-building stone, which would make the construction
-of houses a comparatively simple matter. Penn lost
-no time in purchasing this land from the three
-Swedes to whom it belonged and set to work at once
-with the assistance of Thomas Holme to draw up
-plans for laying out the new city, which was to receive
-the name of Philadelphia, signifying &ldquo;brotherly
-love.&rdquo; This being the ruling principle on which
-his State was founded, he wished it to attract thither
-all who had suffered so bitterly from the lack of
-brotherly love in religious matters. Before a single
-one of the trees that covered the spot was felled,
-before a single foundation stone was laid, the plan
-of the whole city was already clear in Penn&rsquo;s mind
-and the enterprising Holme began at once to lay out
-its streets and public squares. An additional tract
-of about two square miles was also purchased, so that
-these might be of ample width and size to afford the
-future inhabitants plenty of space and air, while
-the building lots were to be large enough to permit
-every house to be surrounded by a garden, thus giving
-the city the appearance, as Penn expressed it, of
-a green country village.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_77">77</div>
-<p>His next act was to summon a general assembly
-of the people, at which were also present delegates
-from those settlements on Delaware Bay which were
-anxious to join Penn&rsquo;s Commonwealth, a desire which
-was granted, the assembly unanimously agreeing to
-the union of the two territories. The constitution
-drawn up by Penn was accepted almost without a
-change, and to the forty provisional laws were added
-twenty-one more, made necessary by the special
-requirements of the new State. In three days the
-whole work of legislation was completed, a proof of
-the unanimity of opinion that existed among these
-enthusiasts drawn thither by the same desire, that
-of finding an asylum where they could live undisturbed
-in the enjoyment of their religious convictions.
-Once this blessing was secured, they willingly submitted
-to laws and regulations that may not have
-been altogether in accordance with their own ideas,
-as indeed could scarcely have been expected among
-people of so many different nationalities and traditions.
-This matter settled, Penn now made a series
-of visits to his neighbors the governors of New York,
-Maryland, and New Jersey, hoping by a personal
-interview with Lord Baltimore to arrive at some
-settlement of the troublesome boundary question,
-but failing in this he returned to his own colony,
-where there was abundance of work for him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>After Penn&rsquo;s departure from England, hundreds
-who had hitherto hesitated decided at once to follow
-him. During the Spring of 1683 twenty-three ships
-came sailing up the Delaware River, filled with colonists
-for whom it was necessary to provide quarters
-that they might lose no time in making a home for
-themselves while the favorable season lasted. This
-task was made somewhat easier now, as the indefatigable
-Holme had already explored the whole
-State and divided it into counties. In order that all
-might have an equal chance, Penn had the land sold
-at public auction. Prices were absurdly low, averaging
-threepence an acre, with an additional rental of
-one shilling on every hundred acres, which was to
-form a sort of State revenue for the governor. When
-it is remembered that Penn had not only paid the
-English government for the land originally, even
-though a comparatively small sum, but had also
-bought it again from the Indians, whose right of possession
-seemed to him far more well founded than
-that of the English crown, this rental seems a poor
-compensation, and he can hardly be blamed for
-afterward reserving a considerable estate for himself
-and his children, especially as he also made a handsome
-provision both for the Duke of York and for
-his friend and co-worker George Fox. The colonists
-now found themselves in the midst of stirring times,
-especially in the region of the new town, Philadelphia.
-Alloted building sites were cleared of trees and all
-who could work were pressed into service to secure
-as soon as possible a better shelter against the
-weather than was afforded by the tents or temporary
-huts already erected. Even delicate women unused
-to manual labor of any kind helped their fathers or
-husbands in the fields as they could, cooked, carried
-wood and water, and cared for the cows they had
-brought with them from England, some even sawing
-wood or carrying mortar for building. If strength or
-courage failed, it was restored and hearts and hands
-again strengthened by the singing of some hymn and
-by the remembrance of the inestimable blessing which
-was theirs as a reward of their labors and sacrifices.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>The first building completed was a block-house
-twelve feet wide and twenty-two feet long, called
-the &ldquo;Blue Anchor&rdquo; and forced to serve a variety of
-purposes. It was used as a general place of business,
-and being on the bank of the river, formed a landing
-place for vessels, as well as a tavern. Later it was
-also used for a post-house, for Penn, realizing the
-necessity of some regular means of communication
-between Philadelphia and the outlying settlements
-to the west, soon established a messenger post service
-by which news could be sent and received once a
-week. Travellers could also be provided with horses
-if desired. Few availed themselves of this service
-at first, it is true, for the rates were very high; the
-delivery of a letter from Philadelphia to Trenton
-Falls in New Jersey, for example, costing threepence,
-and ninepence to Baltimore, Maryland. The &ldquo;Blue
-Anchor&rdquo; soon had companions, however. In the
-course of a few months as many as eighty houses had
-been built and a regular trade gradually developed.
-Merchants set up shops supplied with merchandise
-such as was constantly arriving by vessel from England.
-Trained artisans were now available to do
-the work that every man had been hitherto obliged to
-perform for himself as best he could. The husbandman
-betook himself to the hoe and plough wherever
-there was a clearing large enough to use them and won
-such rich harvests from the virgin soil that it soon
-became no longer necessary to bring grain from
-abroad.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<p>The interiors of the houses were quite as rude and
-rough as the outsides. Once sure of a sound roof to
-cover them, the settlers were content with only the
-barest necessities in the way of household furniture,
-whatever luxuries and comforts they may have been
-accustomed to in the past. Costly furnishings would
-have formed indeed a strange contrast to the rough
-bark-covered logs that constituted the walls, and
-the covering of lime and moss that served as hangings,
-or the hard-packed clay that took the place of
-boards for flooring. A table, a bench or two, a bed,
-all hewed by hand with an axe and innocent of saw
-or plane, besides a few necessary cooking utensils,&mdash;these
-sufficed for the needs of the hard-working settlers,
-who only sought the shelter of a house when
-night or stormy weather made work without impossible
-and the axe and plough must needs be laid
-aside. Not until the original block-houses began to
-be replaced by stone buildings was any thought given
-to interior convenience, but as soon as it became
-possible to employ the services of skilled workmen
-the question of comfort and even elegance began to
-be more considered. Nor was this long in coming,
-for in less than a year from the time when Penn first
-landed at Newcastle there were more than a hundred
-stone houses erected in Philadelphia, and two years
-later the number had increased to six hundred.
-Penn could with truth assure his English friends that
-his American colony was the largest ever founded
-on private credit, and this in no spirit of undue pride
-or self-applause. &ldquo;In seven years,&rdquo; he writes, &ldquo;with
-the help of God and of my noble companions, I will
-show you a province that shall rival our neighbors&rsquo;
-growth of forty years.&rdquo; Nor did he leave any stone
-unturned on his part to make good this prophecy.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<p>One of his chief desires was to provide some means
-for the education of the colonists&rsquo; children that they
-might not grow up rude and ignorant&mdash;a state of
-things most undesirable among a people who were
-to govern themselves. This was no easy matter,
-for the hard-working settler, struggling to wrest a
-home from the wilderness, needed the help of his
-children as soon as they were old enough to be of any
-use. He himself was little disposed after the day&rsquo;s
-labors to devote the evenings to teaching his children,
-even did his own education warrant it, nor could
-he spare the time to send them to a school. Any
-regular form of tuition, moreover, could only be
-possible to those living in Philadelphia. For those
-who had settled many miles, sometimes a whole
-day&rsquo;s journey to the westward, it would have been
-impossible to make paths through the trackless
-wilderness for their children, even had there been a
-school within reach.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<p>Nevertheless Penn made every exertion to accomplish
-this end, and as early as December, 1683, even
-before the site of Philadelphia was entirely cleared
-of trees, he had a certain Enoch Flower open a
-school in a wretched wooden cabin which was divided
-into two rooms. Instruction was confined, however,
-to reading and writing, for the former of which a
-charge of four shillings, the latter six shillings, a
-quarter, was made, to form a school fund. Arrangements
-were also made by which the children of distant
-settlers could be provided with board and lodging
-at a cost of ten pounds a year. This primitive
-institution was gradually improved and enlarged till
-in six years&rsquo; time the position of head master was
-assumed by Penn&rsquo;s friend, George Keith. By the
-efforts of a certain William Bradford who had come
-over from England on the <i>Welcome</i>, a printing press
-was also set up in Philadelphia, the first product of
-which, of any note, was a calendar for the year 1687.</p>
-<p>Another of Penn&rsquo;s special cares was the maintenance
-of friendly relations with the Indians, for which
-Colonel Markham had already paved the way. He
-made it a personal duty to win their confidence and
-to this end mingled with them as much as possible,
-roaming about with them through the forest, wholly
-unarmed, sharing their meals, and even joining in
-the games and sports of the young men, at which he
-sometimes displayed skill or agility equal to their
-own. In this way he also learned their language and
-became so familiar with their habits and manner of
-thought that it became as easy for him to communicate
-with them as if he had been one of themselves.</p>
-<div class="img" id="pic3">
-<img src="images/p91.jpg" alt="" width="581" height="803" />
-<p class="caption"><i>PENN AND THE INDIANS</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>It was necessary, however, for him to establish
-peaceful relations with all the Indian tribes claiming
-his territory as their hunting grounds, as well as with
-those nearer at hand, for the farther the settlers penetrated
-into the wilderness the greater was the danger
-of their being treated by the Indians as hostile invaders,
-unless protected by some agreement. He
-therefore determined to invite all the tribes to a general
-council for the purpose of concluding a solemn
-treaty of peace and friendship.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="h2line1">Chapter VII</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">The Indian Conference&mdash;Signing of the Treaty&mdash;Penn Returns to England to Defend his Rights against Lord Baltimore&mdash;Accession of James the Second&mdash;His Dethronement and Accession of William the Third</span></h2>
-<p>The place chosen by Penn for this conference
-was a spot which had been used by the
-natives from time immemorial for such
-purposes. It was called &ldquo;Sakimaxing,&rdquo; now
-Shakamaxon, meaning &ldquo;Place of the King,&rdquo; and was
-situated on the bank of the Delaware not far from
-the site of Philadelphia. The wide-spreading branches
-of a huge elm, then at least a hundred and fifty years
-old, shaded the beautiful spot which commanded a
-superb view of the river and the dark woods of the
-New Jersey shore beyond. Long before a paleface
-ever entered these regions the Indians had assembled
-here to hold their councils, settle their disputes,
-and smoke the pipe of peace, as was their custom.
-It was here too that Colonel Markham had first
-treated with them.</p>
-<div class="img" id="pic4">
-<img src="images/p95.jpg" alt="" width="583" height="796" />
-<p class="caption"><i>THE CONFERENCE</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
-<p>They willingly obeyed the summons of the &ldquo;great
-Onas,&rdquo; as they called the white chief who had completely
-won their hearts, while the distant tribes who
-had never seen Penn in person were most curious
-to behold this paleface of whom they had heard so
-much and who must be so different from any other
-of whom they had ever heard. They arrived in
-bands, in their picturesque garb, the skin of some
-animal or a handwoven blanket wrapped about the
-upper part of their bodies, which were marked with
-strange signs and painted in the most brilliant colors,
-their feet enclosed in leather moccasins, making
-possible a light and perfectly noiseless tread, their
-heads adorned with the huge war bonnets of many-colored
-feathers. All the great chiefs were present,
-among them the wise old Tamemund, most distinguished
-of all. Penn, now in the prime of manhood,
-was handsomely dressed in European fashion to
-receive his Indian friends. The long coat with its
-rows of shining buttons and lace ruffles falling from
-the wrists fitted smoothly over his tall, well-built
-frame and half covered the slashed knee breeches.
-He wore, according to the custom of the time, a long
-curled wig on which rested a plain beaver hat. As
-he stood there calm and dignified, as became a great
-leader, surrounded by a few of his closest friends,
-among whom was Colonel Markham, already known
-to most of the Indians, the kindness and benevolence
-that shone in his dark eyes could not but win the
-confidence of these simple children of the forest.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<p>After the pipe of peace had been passed around
-the circle, Tamemund arose and placed on his head
-a sort of crown, or wreath, to which was attached a
-small horn. This was to signify that the spot as well
-as the company was now consecrated, so to speak,
-and the conference could proceed. He then seated
-himself again, surrounded by the oldest and most
-renowned chiefs of tribes, the warriors forming a
-semi-circle behind them, while the youths who had
-not yet attained the dignity of braves ranged themselves
-in the background. Tamemund now announced
-that his children were ready to listen to the
-great Onas.</p>
-<p>Slowly and with dignity Penn arose in answer to
-this summons, and after letting his keen glance travel
-lightly over the assembled group, waiting silent and
-motionless for his words, he began to speak, using
-the Lenni Lennapee dialect, with which he was most
-familiar, and preserving as far as possible the figurative
-language of the Indians. The Great Spirit, so
-he declared, who made all men and to whom all good
-men return after death, who reads all hearts, knew
-that he and his children meant well by their red
-brothers and sincerely wished to live in peace and
-concord with them and to be their friends and to
-help them in every way possible. This too was the
-will of the Great Spirit, that all his people should be
-as one family, bearing one another&rsquo;s burdens and
-sharing one another&rsquo;s sorrows. Thus would he and
-his children treat their Indian brothers; musket
-and sword should be discarded and they should live
-together friendly and loyally. In return they hoped
-for the same pledge from the redmen, in whose justice
-and honesty they had the firmest trust.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<p>After these introductory words, which were received
-with repeated signs of approval from his
-audience, Penn read aloud the treaty of peace, drawn
-up by himself, and explained its various points more
-in detail. It stipulated that everything should be
-free, alike to the palefaces and their red brothers,
-and the doors of the one be ever open to the other,
-that the children of Onas would listen to no false
-tales against their brothers, who on their part must
-believe no evil of the palefaces, but each must agree
-to report to the other anything that should come to
-his knowledge which might prove harmful to him.
-Should any one suffer a real injury he must not take
-vengeance himself, but lay the matter before his
-chief or Onas, when sentence should be passed by
-the judgment of twelve just men; after this the injury
-must be forgotten as if it had never occurred.
-Lastly, this treaty of friendship should be handed
-down to their children and be kept sacred so long
-as water flowed in the rivers or the sun, moon, and
-stars shone in the heavens.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<p>Penn then placed the written treaty on the
-ground between himself and the Indian chiefs, who
-retired to hold a brief consultation, after which
-Tamemund answered for his companions that they
-were satisfied with the treaty and would keep it in
-the letter and in the spirit. This was all. No oaths
-were taken, no seal set; the simple word of both was
-sufficient. It has been said of this treaty made by
-Penn with the Indians, in contrast to the many
-signed and sealed between Christian peoples only
-stands alone as the only treaty never sworn to and
-never broken. While the other settlers in the New
-World were perpetually at warfare with the Indians,
-and many were slain by them in the most cruel
-manner, there was never a drop of blood shed in this
-manner in the Quaker colony. The memory of
-Penn, the great Onas, was cherished by the natives
-long after he had left America and even after his
-death, and none of his children ever lacked shelter
-and hospitality from them. Nor have his countrymen
-forgotten the service rendered to them by this
-treaty with the Indians. When in 1810 the great
-elm under which it was concluded was blown down
-in a terrific storm, Penn&rsquo;s descendants in England
-were sent a block of wood from this famous tree,
-which, according to its rings, had attained an age
-of nearly three hundred years and the enormous circumference
-of twenty-four feet. On the spot where
-it had stood a simple monument of granite was
-afterward placed in memory of that invaluable
-covenant to which Pennsylvania was so largely indebted
-for its quick and prosperous development.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<p>The original constitution drawn up by Penn proving
-in some respects no longer adapted to existing
-conditions in the colony, it was subjected to some
-changes, though the fundamental principles were retained
-unaltered. The government was now placed
-entirely in the hands of the people, to be exercised
-through their deputies, and a council also chosen by
-them, Penn resigning all share in the administration.
-&ldquo;My aim,&rdquo; he wrote one of his friends, &ldquo;is to leave
-no power to my successors by which any single
-individual may work harm to or interfere with the
-welfare of the whole country.&rdquo; How much this was
-appreciated is shown by the passage of a resolution
-by the government to impose a tax on certain articles
-for Penn&rsquo;s benefit. He refused to accept it, however,
-although he might have done so with a clear conscience,
-as it was well known that he had spent over
-twenty thousand pounds at various times in paying
-the Indians for the land they had given up, but in
-which they still retained the right to hunt and fish.
-On the thirtieth of March, 1683, the newly revised
-constitution was accepted, signed by Penn, and then
-submitted to the English government for approval.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<p>At this time Penn was much interested in the
-progress of a house which was being built for him
-under Markham&rsquo;s supervision at a place afterward
-known as Pennsburg, which was to be his family
-mansion when he brought his wife and children out
-from England. Anxious as he was, however, that
-all about it should be according to his wishes, the
-troublesome boundary dispute called him away to
-Newcastle, where it was hoped the matter might be
-finally settled. But no agreement was reached and
-Lord Baltimore soon afterward sailed for England to
-lay his claims before the King. Reluctant as he was
-to leave America, and necessary as his presence was
-there at that time, Penn realized, therefore, that in
-order to protect his own rights he would be forced
-to follow the same course and carry his case to
-England likewise. This decision was hastened by
-the arrival of letters from home informing him not
-only of the dangerous illness of his wife, but also of
-the outbreak of fresh persecutions against all dissenters,
-and especially the Quakers. The Friends wrote
-urging his return and beseeching him to use his influence
-at court once more in their favor, as he had
-so often done in the past. Moreover, his enemies
-had circulated various calumnies against him which
-could only be refuted by himself in person.</p>
-<p>There seemed no choice left him. He must put
-the Atlantic Ocean between him and his province,
-for which he had labored so zealously and so successfully
-for more than a year and a half. But before
-he sailed he once more summoned the Indian chiefs
-to bid them farewell and urge them even more
-strongly than before to keep faith with him and
-observe their treaty with his &ldquo;children.&rdquo; During
-his absence the business of government was entrusted
-to a few chosen citizens on whom he could depend
-to carry out his ideas and principles. How hard it
-was for him to leave in spite of his anxiety to be at
-the bedside of his sick wife, and how much at heart
-he had the welfare of his province, is shown by the
-fact that even after he had boarded the ship he took
-time before it sailed to write a parting letter of instructions
-to his deputies, urging them to maintain
-the peace he had striven so hard to establish and
-invoking the blessing of God on the new settlement.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_91">91</div>
-<p>The return voyage was a more prosperous one
-than the last, and in June, 1684, Penn landed safely
-on his native shores again. The anxiety he had
-suffered during the voyage as to his wife&rsquo;s illness
-fortunately proved groundless, for he found her
-quite restored to health, thus leaving nothing to
-mar the joy of reunion with his family. He did not
-long enjoy this happiness, however, for his first care
-was to secure some settlement of his dispute with
-Lord Baltimore. He hastened to London, therefore,
-after a few days, to present himself at court, where
-he was most graciously received both by the King
-and the Duke of York, who assured him that the
-matter should be promptly adjusted in all fairness.
-The King falling ill soon after this, however, the
-subject was again deferred and Lord Baltimore determined
-to take advantage of the situation by possessing
-himself of the disputed territory. He sent word,
-therefore, to his agents in America to seize it by
-force, ejecting all settlers who refused to acknowledge
-his sovereignty or to pay the tax imposed by him.
-Nothing but the threat made by the government of
-Pennsylvania of an immediate complaint to the King
-prevented the execution of this order, the result of
-which interference was that in addition to the malicious
-charges already heaped upon Penn by his
-enemies it was said that this apostle of peace had
-done his best to kindle a civil war in America.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<p>On the sixth of February, 1685, King Charles the
-Second died and his brother the Duke of York succeeded
-to the throne as James the Second. The time
-now seemed ripe for Penn to pave the way for the
-establishment in England of that liberty of conscience
-for which he had already made so many sacrifices
-and secured so successful a home across the sea.
-The new King had always been opposed to the
-religious persecutions that had existed during his
-brother&rsquo;s reign and Penn looked with confidence for
-some manifestation of these sentiments now that
-James was on the throne. Nor was he disappointed.
-In response to a petition addressed to the new sovereign
-by Penn, an order was immediately issued
-suspending all penalties against religious offenders
-and releasing those who were imprisoned for such
-reasons, among whom were more than twelve hundred
-Quakers alone. But the mere exercise of the royal
-right of pardon by no means satisfied Penn. His
-aim was to secure universal liberty of conscience in
-England by the passage of a law which should guarantee
-this, and through the favor he enjoyed with the
-King he still hoped to bring it about. In order to
-be near at hand, therefore, he removed his residence
-from Worminghurst to London, that he might lose
-no opportunity of exerting his influence with James,
-nor did the fact of his being accused of having secretly
-joined the Catholic religion to please the King deter
-him in the least, accustomed as he was to all sorts of
-calumny.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_93">93</div>
-<p>The political intrigues in which James the Second
-was continually involved, and which finally led to
-another revolution, Penn was careful to avoid, and he
-would gladly have exchanged the turmoil of court life
-for his peaceful transatlantic colony had not a feeling
-of duty to the cause he had undertaken urged him
-to remain where he might be of some use. He spent
-much time at court and was held in high regard by
-the King, who permitted him to say many things
-that no other could have ventured with impunity.
-This was well known and Penn&rsquo;s house was constantly
-besieged with petitioners seeking to profit by his
-influence with the King. Yet firm as was Penn&rsquo;s
-confidence in James&rsquo; good faith, he could not blind
-himself to the ever-increasing distrust and dissatisfaction
-with which his subjects regarded him. Not
-only did he openly practise the rites of his religion,
-having a magnificent chapel built near the palace
-for the observance of Catholic worship, but he also
-instituted several monastic orders, while the Jesuits
-were permitted such influence at court that it was
-generally feared an attempt would be made to introduce
-that religion as the state form of worship.
-This suspicion was still further increased when in
-March, 1687, the King summarily abolished all penal
-laws against dissenters, including the so-called Test
-Act, which permitted none but members of the
-established church to hold public office of any kind.
-As this act had been originally framed for the express
-purpose of excluding Catholics from the government, its abolition naturally was regarded with
-alarm.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_94">94</div>
-<p>Rejoiced as Penn was at the repeal of the hated
-laws against dissenters, he felt it his duty to warn
-the King against showing such open favor toward
-Catholicism, urging him at the same time to secure
-the authority of Parliament for these reforms. But
-James heeded neither the warning nor the appeal
-and insisted on the exercise of absolute power without
-reference to Parliament. Fearing lest the abolition
-of some of the fundamental national laws might
-follow in the same arbitrary manner, a storm of protest
-followed and a general revolt seemed imminent.
-Many eyes had already been turned toward the
-King&rsquo;s son-in-law, Prince William of Orange, as a
-possible successor to the English throne, and at this
-crisis the Prince, being even then in communication
-with the malcontents in England, was approached
-with offers as to the dethronement of James, offers
-which he had no scruples in accepting.</p>
-<p>On the fifth of November, 1688, he accordingly
-landed on the English coast with a well-armed force
-and was hailed with general acclamations, the troops
-hastily collected by the King for his own defence also
-deserting to his standard. On hearing this news
-James fled from London, thinking to escape to France,
-but being discovered on his way to the coast he was
-advised by his friends to return to London. At
-the approach of the Prince of Orange, however, he
-again fled, and this time succeeded in reaching the
-shores of France in safety, where he was willingly
-given shelter by his friend Louis the Fourteenth.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_95">95</div>
-<p>On the twenty-second of January, 1689, the throne
-of England was declared vacant by Parliament and
-the Prince of Orange proclaimed King, as William the
-Third, on subscribing to a law regulating the prerogatives
-of the crown as well as the State and depriving
-the sovereign of those rights which James had so arbitrarily
-exercised of abolishing laws on his own absolute
-authority or of interfering with their execution.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="h2line1">Chapter VIII</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">Penn Tried for Treason and Acquitted&mdash;Withdrawal of Penn&rsquo;s Charter&mdash;Death of his Wife and Son&mdash;Second Marriage&mdash;Journey to America&mdash;Penn&rsquo;s Home&mdash;Attempts to Correct Abuses&mdash;Returns to England and Encounters Fresh Dangers&mdash;Penn in the Debtors&rsquo; Prison&mdash;Ingratitude of the Colonists</span></h2>
-<p>The flight of King James was the signal for the
-departure of his friends and favorites also,
-but Penn refused to leave the country in
-spite of urgent entreaties from all sides to do
-so. Calm in the consciousness that he had done nothing
-which was not for the honor and welfare of England,
-he persisted in this determination even when
-the houses of many who were supposed to favor the
-fugitive King were burned by the populace. When
-called upon by the council, which had assumed the
-reins of government, to explain his relations with
-James, he declared simply that his life had been
-devoted to the service of his country and the Protestant
-religion, that the King had been his father&rsquo;s
-friend and his own guardian, and that while he had
-always shown him the respect and obedience due
-from a subject, he had done nothing and should do
-nothing inconsistent with his duty to God and his
-country.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>On this frank declaration he was allowed to go free,
-after giving a bond of six thousand pounds, until
-his public trial should take place, at which he was
-later acquitted. In spite of this, however, he was
-twice again tried for treason, in one case even being
-accused of complicity in a plot to restore James the
-Second to the throne, but his innocence was so clearly
-proved and his frank simplicity made so favorable
-an impression on his judges and on the King as well,
-that in both cases he was fully exonerated and discharged
-from custody. Owing to his being still
-under suspicion, however, and secretly watched, he
-was doubtless warned to remain out of sight for a
-time, for except for some works of his which were
-published at this period, even his friends saw nothing
-of him for a space of two years. The passage of a
-law framed by the new King acknowledging the
-existence of dissenters and forbidding their persecution
-in future rejoiced Penn greatly, even though the
-Test Act still remained in force and only members
-of the established church could enjoy the full rights
-of citizenship. But other matters had arisen in the
-meantime that caused him great uneasiness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<p>War between France and England again seemed
-inevitable, in which case the North American States
-would be placed in a position of great danger, the
-French having established such friendly relations
-with the Indians that an alliance between them must
-be expected. Under these circumstances it seemed
-absolutely necessary for Penn to carry out the plan
-he had long had in mind of returning to Pennsylvania
-to protect the rights he had earned by such labor
-and sacrifice. An unforeseen event, however, interfered
-for a time with this intention, for on the tenth
-of March, 1692, a royal decree was issued placing
-both Pennsylvania and New Jersey under the military
-command of a Colonel Fletcher, who was to defend
-them against the hostile tribes of Indians already
-on the war-path. It came about in this way. The
-North American provinces, already grown or growing
-into States, having been made practically independent
-either by gift or purchase during the preceding
-reigns, King William determined to unite them
-again with the English crown and thereby provide
-himself with part of the force he needed for the war
-with France. As the Quakers of Pennsylvania had
-shown no great haste to offer allegiance to the new
-sovereign, Penn&rsquo;s enemies had taken advantage of
-this fact to urge the withdrawal of his charter, and
-while Penn himself had no doubt that this arbitrary
-measure would be revoked in the course of time, and
-felt convinced that the money he had spent in purchasing
-the land from the Indians, almost his entire
-fortune, must constitute an indubitable claim to the
-province, still the blow was a hard one and he found
-himself in a by no means encouraging situation.
-Added to this were family cares and anxieties, both
-his wife and eldest son being seriously ill at the time.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
-<p>Amid these troubles he was only sustained by his
-faith in God and in the ultimate triumph of right,
-a faith which was justified after some delay by the
-restoration to him of his American province, the
-King, however, reserving the right to defend it until
-the end of the war, a condition to which Penn, being
-a Quaker, could conscientiously make no objection.</p>
-<p>Penn&rsquo;s greatest anxiety now was to return to
-America, but he was still detained in England by
-the condition of his oldest son, who had developed
-consumption. Shortly before this he had experienced
-the bitter sorrow of losing Guli, his beloved
-wife, who for twenty-one years had been the joy of
-his life. Being unable consequently to leave England
-he arranged by permission of the government to
-send a few trustworthy representatives to Pennsylvania
-to protect his rights while he remained to care
-for his sick son. After an illness of two years
-Springett died, February 10, 1696, and the heartbroken
-father exclaimed: &ldquo;I have lost in him all
-that a father can lose in a son.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_100">100</div>
-<p>Penn was now left in sole care of his two remaining
-children, Letty and William, the latter of
-whom, resembling his grandfather more than his
-father in character, needed judicious control. It
-was this fact chiefly that induced Penn, then nearly
-fifty years old, to marry again. At the beginning
-of the year 1696 he was united to Hannah Callowhill
-of Bristol, a sensible, pious woman, who presented
-him with six children and outlived him several
-years. Still Penn found himself unable to go back
-to Pennsylvania, which he had not seen for thirteen
-years. For neither his wife nor his daughter Letty,
-now grown to womanhood, could make up their minds
-to follow him to America and leave their native land,
-perhaps forever. As little would his son William
-listen even to the idea of exchanging the pleasures he
-enjoyed at home for the monotony of life in Pennsylvania.</p>
-<p>By the year 1699, however, the English government
-had received so many complaints of mismanagement
-on the part of Markham and Penn&rsquo;s other
-representatives there that Penn, fearing he might
-again be in danger of losing his province, decided to
-make the move to America at any cost, especially
-as the French war had been brought to a close by
-the Peace of Ryswick and the usual peaceful conditions
-might be expected again to exist in Pennsylvania.
-Under these circumstances his wife and
-daughter abandoned their opposition to the plan,
-but young William still refusing to leave England,
-the family were forced to sail without him. Owing
-to contrary winds, the passage this time was a very
-long one, lasting fully three months, a fortunate
-occurrence as it proved, notwithstanding general
-complaints, for they thereby escaped an epidemic of
-some malignant fever which had caused great loss
-of life in Philadelphia.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_101">101</div>
-<p>Penn&rsquo;s return to his province after an absence of
-fifteen years was hailed with universal rejoicing, and
-now that he had brought his family with him it was
-hoped he would remain to watch over the people
-who had so long been deprived of his fatherly care.
-It must indeed have been a temptation to Penn
-to settle down here in peace for the rest of his
-days, for his Pennsburg had now grown into a most
-beautiful estate. The land chosen for it by himself
-and Markham was superbly situated and protected
-against any kind of attack by the Delaware River,
-which almost entirely surrounded it, affording at
-the same time a delicious coolness that made it
-comfortable even in the intense heat of summer.
-The house, which was built overlooking the river, was
-sixty feet in length by forty in depth and was surrounded
-with magnificent gardens, which were Penn&rsquo;s
-special delight. Beyond these stretched a fine park,
-left for the most part in its natural wildness and
-filled with huge trees whose interlacing branches
-formed a canopy overhead, while here and there were
-artfully planned nooks and bits of fine landscape
-gardening. The lower story of the stately mansion
-was almost entirely taken up by a great hall capable
-of accommodating the largest assemblies, while the
-upper contained the living rooms, the windows of
-which commanded a charming view across the river
-to the wooded shores of New Jersey. The extensive
-outbuildings included a fine stable, for Penn was a
-great lover of horses, and on the water before the
-house was moored a charming pleasure yacht for
-excursions on the river. Penn&rsquo;s wife and daughter
-were equally pleased with this delightful home, and
-as the master of the house was fond of having guests
-and willingly permitted all innocent forms of amusement,
-they found little reason to regret the change
-to which they had found it so hard to reconcile
-themselves.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
-<p>Penn himself, however, had little time to devote
-to pleasure, for much and difficult work awaited
-him. First of all it was necessary to rectify the evils
-which had given rise to so much complaint, chief
-of which was the introduction of contraband trade.
-He soon found that by no means all the inhabitants
-of his colony shared his disinterestedness or his
-loftiness of purpose. He met with especial opposition
-in his efforts to better the condition of the negro
-slaves. This traffic in human beings had continued
-to flourish ever since his first visit to America, for
-at that time its infamy was not recognized. The
-blacks were looked upon as creatures little above
-the brutes, to buy and sell whom was perfectly legitimate.
-In the first constitution drawn up by him,
-Penn had inserted an article stipulating that negro
-servants should be freed after fourteen years of
-service, provided they gave their former masters
-two-thirds of all they produced from the land assigned
-to them, failing which they were to return to servitude.
-This did not prevent the continuation of
-slavery, however, the legality or illegality of which
-being regarded as a question which no reasonable
-man need trouble himself about. The German
-settlers from the Rhine Palatinate were the only
-ones to protest against it, and they indeed left no
-stone unturned to secure support and recognition
-for their cause. Penn&rsquo;s attempts to introduce a law
-for the benefit of the negroes therefore met with
-such strong opposition from the assembly that he
-was forced to abandon his benevolent plans until a
-more favorable opportunity should occur. He kept
-no slaves himself, preferring to hire those of his
-neighbors when he needed their services.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
-<p>The Indians were overjoyed at the return of the
-great Onas, who immediately renewed the old friendly
-relations with them. They had faithfully observed
-the treaty concluded in 1682 and had fared so
-well in consequence that other tribes which had
-then held aloof were now eager to join the alliance,
-to which Penn gladly agreed, as it would add in no
-small degree to the safety of his province. After
-this ceremony had been performed in the manner
-already described, Penn entertained his new allies
-in the great hall of his mansion, while they returned
-the hospitality by performing some of their wild
-dances upon the lawn for their host and his family.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_104">104</div>
-<p>Penn continued to labor unceasingly for the welfare
-not only of his own, but also of the neighboring
-provinces for two years, when once more he was
-interrupted by the arrival of bad news from England.
-This was the introduction of a bill into Parliament
-bringing all proprietary governments under the control
-of the crown, and it was with difficulty that
-Penn&rsquo;s friends succeeded in having the hearing
-deferred until he could return from America. His
-presence in England therefore seemed indispensable
-at this juncture and the assembly of Pennsylvania
-urged him to lose no time. All necessary measures
-of government were hastily arranged and some
-alterations made in the constitution, but already it
-had become painfully evident that the representatives
-of the people were seeking their own advantage
-only and paying little heed to the interests of the
-man to whom they owed so much. They even
-refused to furnish the means for his journey to
-England, though it was undertaken entirely at their
-behest and in their interest, and Penn was forced to
-depend on raising the necessary money during his
-stay in London by the sale of some of his lands.</p>
-<p>His wife and daughter were glad enough to return
-to England. The novelty and excitement of the
-new life had worn away by this time and they hastened
-as much as possible the preparations for
-departure. The Indians, on the contrary, were bitterly
-disappointed when they heard that the great
-Onas was to leave them again so soon. They came
-from near and far to bid him farewell and were only
-consoled by the assurance that during his absence
-the same justice and friendship should be shown
-them, to insure which Penn made both the council and
-his deputy, Colonel Hamilton, personally
-responsible. As a parting gift he presented the city
-of Philadelphia with a deed of grant for the land on
-which it stood, and after promising to send his son
-out at once, that he might become familiar with the
-nature and needs of the country over which he might
-one day claim ownership, Penn left the shores of
-America, never to return.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_105">105</div>
-<p>On his arrival in England, toward the end of 1701,
-he found the situation by no means so bad as he had
-feared. It had been merely a plot on the part of his
-enemies to deprive him of his ownership of Pennsylvania
-without any indemnification. Upon Penn&rsquo;s
-proving that he had relinquished a claim on ten
-thousand pounds against the crown in exchange
-for his patent, which document had been drawn up
-in the proper legal form; that besides this he had
-acquired undisputed possession of the land by subsequent
-purchase from the Indians; and finally, that
-the interest on that ten thousand pounds had by
-this time increased it to more than double that
-sum, which must lawfully be paid to him if he were
-deprived of his province, even King William was
-forced to recognize the justice of his cause and the proposed
-bill was abandoned, never to be revived again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_106">106</div>
-<p>Penn had not neglected to fulfil his promise to the
-Pennsylvanians and immediately after his arrival
-had ordered his son to leave as soon as possible for
-Philadelphia; but it was with great reluctance that
-he did so, for during his father&rsquo;s absence the pleasure-loving
-youth had abandoned himself to every form
-of dissipation, to the great detriment not only of his
-health, but of his pocket. To send him out to
-America alone without restraint or guardianship of
-any kind meant merely a continuation of his dissolute
-career, with perhaps ruin and disgrace to the
-honorable name he bore. Nor was the young man
-any better pleased with the idea, and it was not
-till his father had opened his eyes to the seriousness
-of the situation and agreed to pay his debts that he
-yielded and promised to go without further protest.
-Before he sailed Penn wrote to some of the Friends
-in Philadelphia begging them to watch over his son
-with fatherly care and solicitude. All seemed to
-go well at first with young William. He troubled
-himself little, to be sure, as to the province or its
-affairs, preferring rather to spend his time in hunting
-and fishing; but the evil spirit in him soon broke out
-afresh, and he plunged once more into a life of wild
-excess, defying all the laws of the country, and after
-he had succeeded in squandering huge sums of money
-and making himself thoroughly detested, he went
-back to England, unbidden and unregretted.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_107">107</div>
-<p>The payment of these new debts contracted by
-his son caused Penn great financial embarrassment,
-which was still further increased by the unexpected
-and extortionate demands of a creditor. This was
-the successor of his former advocate and man of
-business, who at the time of Penn&rsquo;s first journey to
-America had advanced him the sum of twenty-eight
-hundred pounds in exchange for which and ostensibly
-as a mere matter of form he had induced his unsuspecting
-client to sign a bond pledging the whole
-province of Pennsylvania as security. Now without
-any warning an account of fourteen thousand pounds
-was sent in to Penn with the threat that an attachment
-would be served if this sum were not immediately
-paid. After investigating this fraudulent
-account, he declared himself willing to settle for
-some four thousand pounds, all to which the creditor
-was justly entitled. This the latter refused to
-accept, however, and the owner of Pennsylvania
-was forced to go to a debtors&rsquo; prison as the assembly
-of that colony refused to make him any advances or
-even pay the revenues owing to him. In this emergency
-Penn offered for the sum of twenty thousand
-pounds to sell his whole province to Queen Anne,
-who, as the second daughter of the dethroned King
-James the Second, had succeeded to the throne on the
-death of William the Third, in 1702. She refused to
-take it, however, and at length he managed by great
-effort to raise between seven and eight thousand
-pounds, with which his false creditor finally agreed
-to content himself, Penn thereby procuring release.</p>
-<p>The long confinement had so seriously affected
-Penn&rsquo;s health that he now decided to leave London
-and moved with his family to Brentford, some eight
-miles distant, where he devoted himself entirely to
-his former vocation of preaching the gospel throughout
-the country and conducting meetings for his
-Quaker brethren. The increasing infirmities of age,
-however, soon put an end to these journeyings,
-Penn having now reached the age of sixty-five, and
-in 1710, therefore, he retired to Rushcombe in
-Buckinghamshire, where he remained until his death.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_108">108</div>
-<p>From there he addressed a communication to the
-settlers in Pennsylvania, reproaching them for the
-ingratitude with which they had rewarded his labors
-and sacrifices in their behalf. His last journey to
-England had been taken solely in their interests to
-prevent the absorption of that province by the crown,
-in which case their existing constitution would have
-been abolished. He had made every effort to accomplish
-this purpose, in spite of their indifference, with
-the result that he had become impoverished while
-they had grown rich; while they, thanks to his foresight
-and perseverance, were in possession of an
-empire, liberty, and power, and he, for their sake
-and because of their avarice, had been forced to
-languish in a debtors&rsquo; prison. He was forced to conclude,
-therefore, that it was their wish to sever the
-old relations hitherto existing between them and
-himself, in which case, if they would signify their
-desire by the choice of a successor, he would then
-know how to act.</p>
-<p>This letter did not fail to impress the conscience-stricken
-Pennsylvanians. At the popular election
-which shortly followed a new assembly was chosen
-in place of the one that had proved so ungrateful to
-their benefactor, and it was no small consolation to
-Penn, broken as he was by trouble and ill health, that
-this new assembly unanimously agreed on the passage
-of resolutions that filled him with hope for the future
-of the province.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="h2line1">Chapter IX</span>
-<br /><span class="h2line2">Death of his Dissolute Son William&mdash;Penn&rsquo;s Last Illness and Mental Decline&mdash;His Death and Will</span></h2>
-<p>The younger William Penn meanwhile had
-gone from bad to worse, to the bitter disappointment
-of his father, who after the untimely
-death of his first-born had placed all
-his hopes on this unworthy son. After having entirely
-estranged his family by his excesses, he entered the
-army in defiance of his father&rsquo;s principles, but resigned
-soon after when an opening offered for election
-to Parliament. Failing to accomplish this, however,
-he abandoned his wife and children and went to the
-continent, where he led a life of riotous adventure
-in the various capitals till his death in 1720.</p>
-<p>It may have been the arrival of some distressing
-news about this degenerate son that led to the apoplectic
-stroke with which Penn was seized early in the
-year 1712 and which in his feeble state of health was
-a serious matter, although he rallied for a time sufficiently
-to be able to occupy himself with colonial
-affairs. The question of slavery was much on his
-mind. He had become more and more convinced
-of its inhumanity and sinfulness and had great
-hopes of securing its abolition, as the untiring efforts
-of the German settlers had secured the passage of
-a law forbidding the importation of any more
-slaves.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_110">110</div>
-<p>This first stroke, however, was soon followed by
-two more which left him a wreck physically and
-mentally. The devoted care of his wife and children
-helped to avert any immediate danger to his life,
-but the brilliant mind was hopelessly shattered. He
-became like a child, serene and peaceful fortunately,
-playing about the house or garden most of the time
-with his own young children and those of his son,
-whom with their deserted mother he had taken into
-his own home at Rushcombe. Occasionally there
-would be lucid moments when he was able to converse
-intelligently, and then the placid smile would vanish
-from his lips at the sight of his wife&rsquo;s care-worn face
-and the realization of the burdens she had to bear
-not only in the management of family affairs, but
-also to keep up the extensive correspondence required
-by colonial matters.</p>
-<p>In this condition Penn lived on for five long years,
-sometimes able to recognize his old friends when
-they came to see him and even exchange a few intelligible
-words with them, but toward the end the
-power both of speech and memory failed him. On
-the thirtieth of May, 1718, he passed away quietly
-and peacefully at the age of seventy-four, after a life
-of ceaseless devotion to the service of God and the
-welfare of humanity.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>In a will made while still in full possession of his
-mental faculties, Penn left the following directions:
-His son William, having already squandered the
-money left him by his deceased mother as her family
-inheritance, was debarred from any share in the
-estate, the English property, yielding at that time
-an annual revenue of some fifteen hundred pounds,
-passing to his children instead. To each of the
-grandchildren, as well as his daughter Letty, he
-bequeathed ten thousand acres of the best land still
-unsold in Pennsylvania, and after disposing of enough
-more of this land to pay the expenses of his burial,
-the remainder was to be divided among his five
-children by his second wife, Hannah Callowhill,
-who was made executor with an annuity of three
-hundred pounds. The management of his colonial
-affairs he entrusted to his two friends the Earls of
-Oxford and Pawlett, with orders to dispose of his
-right of possession on the most favorable terms
-possible, either to the English crown or elsewhere,
-the proceeds to be invested for the benefit of these
-children.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<p>Penn had arranged his worldly affairs with his
-usual wisdom and foresight. While it might appear
-by the terms of the will that he had shown a preference
-for his son William&rsquo;s children by leaving them
-the English property with its assured returns, his
-own receiving only the doubtful American possessions
-which of late had yielded a revenue of little more
-than five hundred pounds a year, yet as a matter of
-fact it was quite the reverse; for during the twenty
-years of peace and prosperity that followed the
-French and Indian war the value of the colonial
-property increased enormously. In 1797 the government
-of Pennsylvania paid the descendants of
-William Penn the sum of one hundred and thirty
-thousand pounds for their rights of ownership,
-exclusive of all personal properties, as well as back-standing
-payments and rents due from the sale of
-lands left them by the founder of the State; while
-in England they also received the additional sum of
-five hundred thousand pounds voted by Parliament
-as indemnity for the losses suffered by him.</p>
-<p>The body of William Penn was laid to rest beside
-those of his first wife and their eldest son in the quiet
-churchyard of the village of Jordan in Buckinghamshire.
-Hundreds came from far and near to pay
-their last respects to the noble Quaker, and it needed
-not the eulogies pronounced over his grave to proclaim
-to the world that a great and good man had
-passed away.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
-<h2 id="c10">APPENDIX</h2>
-<p>The following is a chronological statement of the more
-important events in William Penn&rsquo;s life:</p>
-<table class="center">
-<tr><td>1644</td><td>Birth</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1658</td><td>Death of Oliver Cromwell</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1659</td><td>Penn enters Oxford</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1660</td><td>Expulsion from Oxford</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1660</td><td>Visits Germany</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1664</td><td>War between England and Holland</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1665</td><td>Penn in the naval service</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1667</td><td>Adopts the Quaker faith</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1668</td><td>Begins preaching</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1670</td><td>Penn&rsquo;s arrest</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1672</td><td>Marriage</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1673</td><td>Fresh Quaker persecutions</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1677</td><td>Visits Holland</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1681</td><td>Royal cession of land to Penn</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1682</td><td>Penn goes to America</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1682</td><td>Founding of Philadelphia</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1682</td><td>Treaty made with the Indians</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1683</td><td>The new constitution accepted</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1684</td><td>Penn returns to England</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1685</td><td>Death of Charles the Second</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1688</td><td>Dethronement of James</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1696</td><td>Second marriage</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1699</td><td>Penn returns to America</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1701</td><td>Penn goes back to England</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1702</td><td>Penn imprisoned for debt</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1710</td><td>Penn retires to private life</td></tr>
-<tr><td>1718</td><td>Death of William Penn</td></tr>
-</table>
-<div class="box">
-<p class="center">LIFE STORIES FOR YOUNG PEOPLE</p>
-<p class="center"><i>Translated from the German by</i>
-<br /><span class="small">GEORGE P. UPTON</span></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="sc">36 Volumes Now Ready</span></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><i>American Explorers</i></p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt><span class="sc">Columbus</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Pizarro</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Cortes</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Eric the Red and Leif the Lucky, and Other Pre-Columbian Discoveries of America</span></dt></dl>
-<p class="center"><i>Historical and Biographical</i></p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt><span class="sc">Washington</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Franklin</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Penn</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Maximilian</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Barbarossa</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">William of Orange</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Maria Theresa</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">The Maid of Orleans</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Frederick the Great</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">The Little Dauphin</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Herman and Thusnelda</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">The Swiss Heroes</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Marie Antoinette&rsquo;s Youth</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">The Duke of Brittany</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Louise, Queen of Prussia</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">The Youth of the Great Elector</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Emperor William First</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Elizabeth, Empress of Austria</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Charlemagne</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Prince Eugene</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Eug&eacute;nie, Empress of the French</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Queen Maria Sophia of Naples</span></dt></dl>
-<p class="center"><i>Musical Biography</i></p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt><span class="sc">Beethoven</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Mozart</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Johann Sebastian Bach</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Joseph Haydn</span></dt></dl>
-<p class="center"><i>Legendary</i></p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt><span class="sc">Frithjof Saga</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Gudrun</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">The Nibelungs</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">William Tell</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Arnold of Winkelried</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="sc">Undine</span></dt></dl>
-<p class="center">Illustrated. Each 50 cents <i>net</i>
-<br />A. C. McCLURG &amp; CO., <span class="sc">Chicago</span></p>
-</div>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Copyright notice provided as in the original&mdash;this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)</li>
-<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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