Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography/Penn, William
PENN, William, founder of Pennsylvania, b. in London, England, 14 Oct., 1644; d. in Ruscombe, Berkshire, 30 July, 1718. He was descended from an ancient family that had lived in Buckinghamshire for many generations. A branch settled in Wiltshire, near Minety, and from this was descended Admiral William Penn, the father of the founder, who was born in Bristol in 1621. He joined a vessel early in life under his father's command, and became a captain before he was twenty years of age. In 1643 he married Margaret Jasper, daughter of a rich merchant of Rotterdam, and then settled in London. After a year of fashionable life he returned to active service, and was given command of the “Fellowship.” With unusual rapidity he attained the ranks of rear-admiral and vice-admiral of Ireland, and in 1652 he was vice-admiral of England. He served as general in the first Dutch war, and in 1664 he was chosen great captain-commander under the Duke of York, afterward James II., and was knighted. He died at his home in Wanstead, Essex, on 16 Sept., 1670. (See “Memorials of the Professional Life of Admiral Sir William Penn,” by Granville Penn, London, 1833.) His son, William, was born in London just prior to the admiral's departure for the Irish seas; indeed, he had already started down the Thames when the news of his son's birth reached him, and he hastily left his vessel and returned home. The family resided in Essex during the father's absence, and from his mother the boy acquired his strong religious faith. He was sent to a free grammar-school in Chigwell, thence in 1656 to a private school on Tower street, London, and during the residence of the family in Ireland he studied under a private tutor. Three years later he went to Christ church college, Oxford, where among his companions were Robert Spencer and John Locke. He soon acquired reputation as a hard student, a skilful oarsman, and an adventurous sportsman. His reading at this time was solid and extensive, and his acquisition of knowledge was assisted by an exceptional memory. He had an excellent knowledge of history and theology, had read the chief writers of Greece and Italy in their native tongues, and possessed a thorough knowledge of French, German, Dutch, and Italian. After the restoration of the Stuarts, Thomas Loe, a follower of George Fox (q. v.), began to preach in Oxford against the threatened restoration of what he considered popish usages, such as the wearing of gowns, and soon numbered William Penn among his followers. Penn's absence from service was noticed, and with others he was brought up before the college authorities and fined. This roused the young non-conformists to open rebellion. They paraded the streets, refused to wear the gown, and tore away the vestment from those that did so. In all of these actions Penn was conspicuous, and he was expelled from the university. His father, seriously offended, at first showed great severity, but soon relented, and sent Penn to France, where he was presented to Louis XIV., and became a frequent and welcome guest at court. He mingled with the fashionable world, and bid fair to forget his Quaker fancies. In order to complete his education he placed himself under the tuition of Moses Amyrault, one of the ablest scholars of France and a member of the Reformed church. He remained at Saumur, and then travelled through France and Italy with Lord Robert Spencer, also meeting Algernon Sidney, to whom he became greatly attached. In 1664 he was recalled to England by his father, and taken to court, where he impressed the king by his behavior, and became a general favorite. His name was entered as a law-student at Lincoln's Inn, and for a time he also served on his father's staff, and was sent with despatches from the fleet to the king. In 1665 the plague appeared in London, and the fear of death revived the religious fervor of the young law-student.
He was sent to Ireland to superintend two estates recently granted to his father in the County Cork, and arrived in Dublin in the autumn of 1665 with letters to the Duke of Ormond, who was then viceroy. He was warmly received and gave himself up entirely to pleasure. During the insurrection of soldiers at Carrickfergus he served with credit as aide to Lord Arran, who was charged with the subjection of the mutineers, and he became so interested that he caused his portrait to be painted in armor in memory of the experience. The vignette shows him in this costume and is of value, being the only known likeness of him that was painted during his lifetime. He now desired to join the army, and it was proposed to his father that he should have command of a company of foot; but this the admiral refused. Penn then turned his attention to the family interests, and secured possession of Shangarry castle, and estate for his father. While managing the newly acquired property, he heard by accident that his old Oxford acquaintance, Thomas Loe, was about to preach in Cork. Curiosity led him to the place of worship, and after listening to the sermon, unable to withstand its influence, he accepted the tenets of Quakerism. He then attended the meetings with regularity, and on 3 Sept., 1667, was made prisoner with the entire congregation and taken before the mayor of Cork on a charge of riot. The magistrate offered to release him, provided he would promise to keep the peace; but he refused, and was sent to jail. He wrote to the lord-president of Munster, giving an account of his arrest and detention, and an order was issued for his immediate discharge. He returned to London still wearing the dress that belonged to his rank, absolutely declining, however, to remove his hat in the presence of his social superiors. After remonstrating with his son the admiral expressed his willingness to tolerate everything, provided that he would uncover himself in the presence of his father, the king, and the Duke of York. Asking time for the consideration of this proposition, Penn retired to his room, and, after an hour of prayer and meditation, returned to his father with the declaration that such a course would be impossible. He persisted in his determination; the admiral at last gave way, and Penn became completely identified with the Quakers in dress and conduct as well as belief. This difference with his father was not so serious on the present occasion as when he was sent down from Oxford in 1661, when it is said that the admiral turned him out of doors, relenting, however, shortly after.
Meanwhile he preached and wrote in favor of his belief, publishing “Truth Exalted, in a short but sure Testimony against all those religious Faiths and Worships that have been formed and followed in the darkness of Apostasy; and for that Glorious Light which is now risen and shines forth in the Life and Doctrine of the despised Quakers as the alone good old way of Life and Salvation. Presented to Princes, Priests, and People, that they may repent, believe, and obey. By William Penn, whom Divine Love constrains in an holy contempt to trample on Egypt's glory, not fearing the King's wrath, having beheld the Majesty of Him who is invisible” (1668). This was followed by a number of tracts on similar topics, which with his other writings were collected and published by Joseph Besse (2 vols., London, 1726). At this time he also obtained a promise from the Duke of Buckingham that the latter would bring a bill into parliament to do justice to the Quakers; but the commons refused to consider the measure. Penn then became involved in a controversy with Thomas Vincent, a Presbyterian clergyman, who had openly reviled the Quakers from his pulpit. Vincent, satisfied with having disclosed his side of the argument, failed to call a second meeting, in consequence of which Penn issued “The Sandy Foundation Shaken,” an attack upon “those generally believed and applauded doctrines of one God subsisting in three distinct and separate persons; of the impossibility of God's pardoning sinners without a plenary satisfaction; and of the justification of impure persons by an imputative righteousness.” This work caused great excitement by its bold opposition to the doctrine of the Trinity. Through the influence of the bishop of London and other high dignitaries of the church he was imprisoned in the Tower for more than eight months. During this time he wrote his principal and most popular theological work. “No Cross, no Crown; a Discourse showing the Nature and Discipline of the Holy Cross of Christ” (1688), which was soon followed by his “Innocency with her Open Face,” a brief and vigorous reply to several answers to his “Sandy Foundation Shaken.” These works increased the public interest in him, and his release was ordered through the influence of the Duke of York. He then went to Ireland on business, and while he was there he succeeded in effecting the release of imprisoned Quakers through his influence with old friends at court. On his return he became reconciled with his father, and thereafter lived on good terms with him. Early in 1670 Penn again fell into trouble by preaching in the street in violation of the Conventicle act. He was promptly arrested with Capt. William Mead and taken before the lord-mayor, who sent them to the Old Bailey. In the remarkable trial that followed, the jury, who were kept for two days and nights without food, fire, or water, brought in a verdict of not guilty, for which each juryman was fined forty marks and sent to Newgate, while Penn and Mead were also fined and imprisoned for contempt in wearing their hats in presence of the court. They appealed to the court of common pleas, where the decision of the lower court was reversed, and the great principle of English law was established, that it is the right of the jury to judge of the evidence independently of the dictation or direction of the court. On being liberated, Penn at once returned to the bedside of his father, who died in the course of a few days, bequeathing to his son a property of £1,500 a year. Penn was again arrested in March, 1671, for preaching in a meeting-house in London, and committed to the Tower. He was tried under the Conventicle act, but acquitted for want of testimony, and on his refusing to take the oath of allegiance, owing to conscientious scruples about swearing, was sentenced to Newgate for six months. He spent his time there in writing “The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience,” “Truth rescued frmn Imposture,” “ Postscript to 'Truth Exalted,'” and “An Apology for the Quakers.”
At the expiration of his imprisonment he spent a short time in Holland and Germany, when he was active in making converts, but he soon returned to England, and on 4 April, 1672, he married Gulielma Maria, a daughter of Sir William Springett. At first he resided in Rickmansworth, in Hertfordshire, and then he settled in Worminghurst, in Sussex. During the ensuing few years he devoted much time to itinerant preaching, and published about twenty-six controversial works, some of which displayed great ability, and two political volumes, a “Treatise on Oaths” (1672) and “England's Present Interest Considered ” (1672). He also had a controversy with Thomas Hicks, a Baptist preacher, in London, and published his “Reason against Railing and Truth against Fiction,” and “The Counterfeit Christian Detected.” In 1674 a dispute arose between John Fenwick, agent and trustee of Edward Byllinge, concerning the proprietary rights in the Quaker colonies of New Jersey. The matter was referred to William Penn for arbitration, and he decided in favor of Byllinge, who, becoming involved and unable to meet the demands that were made upon him, surrendered his property to his creditors. The latter appointed two trustees, and he himself selected Penn as a third to care for his interests. Penn showed great zeal in the work of colonization, and soon several vessels laden with emigrants were on their way to the New World. He then turned his attention to the congregations on the continent, and visited Holland and various parts of Germany, where he advocated colonization. On his return to England he continued to send emigrants to this country, and several additional ship-loads of settlers left England, making a total of more than 800 families. His acquaintance with Algernon Sidney, formed many years earlier on the continent, was now renewed, and Sidney became a frequent guest at Worminghurst. In the elections in which Sidney was a candidate for Guildford and Bramber, respectively, Penn was one of his most active supporters. Although he was elected on both occasions, Sidney was not permitted to take his seat, and Penn, indignant at the treatment of his friend, and in consequence of other incidents, proposed to the king's council to receive a certain amount of territory on the Atlantic seaboard and in the interior of the country in lieu of money that was due his father, aggregating about £16,000. After numerous delays and various modifications of the original petition, on 24 Feb., 1681, Charles II. signed a charter that constituted Penn absolute proprietor of the territory in question in consideration of two beaver-skins to be given annually to the king. The name of New Wales was proposed by Penn for the province; but this being objected to, he suggested Sylvania, to which the king prefixed Penn, in honor of the great admiral. Direct appeal to the king and a proffer of twenty guineas to his secretary to have the name changed was unsuccessful.
A liberal scheme of government and laws was drawn up by Penn, aided by Algernon Sidney. Organizations for emigration were established in England and on the continent, and negotiations were entered into with Penn for the sale of lands. In 1681 he sent out Capt. William Markham with instructions to take possession of the province, to search out a convenient spot of ground on which to erect a governor's mansion, and to cultivate a friendly feeling with the Indians. In September, 1683, he himself set out from London on the “Welcome,” and he reached Newcastle on the Delaware late in October, taking formal possession of the territory on the day after his arrival. His first care was the division of his land into counties, the survey of its resources and extent, and the definition of its boundaries. He selected, but not without some dissension, as a site for his capital the neck of land that lies at the junction of Delaware and Schuylkill rivers, which he purchased from the Swedes, and to which he gave the name of Philadelphia. Penn's landing was made at Dock creek, where the “Blue Anchor” tavern was built, beyond which the first ten houses, known as “Budd's Long Row,” were erected. This place at once grew with wonderful rapidity, and within a year a hundred houses had been built. Meanwhile, probably in June, 1683, his famous treaty with the Indians was made. On the banks of the Delaware, at Shackamaxon (afterward Kensington, and now a part of the city), stood a great elm, where in earlier times the Indians had assembled on important occasions, and the name of the place signified, in the Indian language, the “locality of kings.” Here representatives of the Delawares, Mingoes, and other Susquehanna tribes made with the Quakers a treaty of peace and friendship which, according to Voltaire, “was never sworn to and never broken.” The influence of Penn was so great among the Indians that to be a follower of his was at all times a passport to their protection and hospitality. George Bancroft says that “while every other colony in the New World was visited in turn by the horrors of Indian warfare, no drop of Quaker blood was ever shed by a red man in Pennsylvania.” Penn then devoted himself to his duties as governor, and made treaties with other Indian tribes, and as long as any of the aborigines remained in Pennsylvania or its neighborhood their traditions bore testimony to the justice and benevolence of “Mignon,” as the Delawares called him, or of “Onas,” as he was styled by the Iroquois. He then visited New York and New Jersey, and after the meeting of the general assembly of the province at Newcastle in May, 1684, he intrusted the government to a council, and in August sailed for England, leaving a prosperous colony of 7,000 persons. In his farewell he writes: “And thou, Philadelphia, the virgin settlement of this province, named before thou wast born, what love, what care, what service, and what travail hath there been to bring thee forth and preserve thee from such as would abuse and defile thee! My soul prays to God for thee, that thou mayest stand in the day of trial, that thy children may be blessed of the Lord, and thy people saved by his power.” On his return to England he first sought to have the boundary-line between Maryland and Pennsylvania properly adjusted, but Charles II. was then very near his end, and definite action could not be procured. Penn's patron and the friend of his father, the Duke of York, succeeded to the throne as James II., on 6 Feb., 1685, and soon after his accession set at liberty about 1,200 Quakers that had been imprisoned for their religious opinions. The boundary question was a fruitful cause of disputes with the Baltimores of Maryland, and was not finally settled until Mason and Dixon's line was run in 1767 and confirmed in 1769. Penn took up his residence at Kensington, and thereafter, until the king went into exile, he was at court almost daily. His chief object was to persuade the king to introduce into parliament a general act that should permit perfect freedom of opinion in every part of his dominions. His influence with James was well known, and every man with a real grievance found in him a counsellor and friend. Through his efforts a pardon was granted to John Locke, who was then residing at the Hague; but Locke refused to accept it, claiming that he had done no wrong. Penn's success with the king being reported, it naturally made enemies for him, and it was circulated that he had matriculated at a Jesuit seminary, had taken holy orders in Rome, and officiated regularly at mass in the private chapel at Whitehall. Among other attacks on his character are those that were revived by Lord Macaulay in his “History of England.” Macaulay has accused him of acting as an agent of the rapacious maids of honor of the royal court to extort money for pardon from the relatives of some young girls at Taunton who were implicated in Monmouth's rebellion, and also accused him of an attempt to persuade Dr. John Hough, president of Magdalen college, Oxford, to accede to the wishes of King James in a matter where compliance would have involved a violation of his official oath by holding out to him the bait of a bishopric. Neither of these charges can be sustained by any direct evidence, and, moreover, abundant material exists tending to prove their falsity. (See the preface to Hepworth Dixon's “William Penn, an Historical Biography founded on Family and State Papers,” London, 1856).
Penn was sent by James to visit William of Orange, whom he endeavored to convert to his views of universal toleration, and, after visiting in Holland, he travelled through Rhineland, where he circulated reports of the success of his colony. In April, 1687, the king issued a proclamation declaring liberty of conscience to all, and removing tests and penalties, which was largely the result of Penn's influence. Penn was the only one of the court circle that remained in London after his flight, and he was called before the lords of council, who, finding nothing against him, save that he was a friend of James, required of him bonds for his appearance on the first day of the following term, when he was declared free of every charge that had been made against him. Subsequently a letter from the exiled James, requesting him to come to France, was intercepted, and he was again brought before the council in presence of King William. After a long examination, in which Penn declared his friendship for James though he did not approve of the latter's policy, and said he could not prevent the exile from writing to him, he was discharged. He was arrested twice or thrice after this, on the charge of being implicated in various plots, but secured discharge for lack of evidence. In 1692 he was deprived of his government, and his province was annexed to the colony of New York. On 23 Feb., 1694, his wife died, and he bore testimony to her virtuous life in “An Account of the Blessed End of my Dear Wife.” In March, 1696, he married Hannah Callowhill, of Bristol, a Quaker lady, with whom he had long been acquainted. Meanwhile, in August 1694, an order in council was made restoring him to his government. He then sent out William Markham as his deputy; but, since 1684, ever planning a return to America, on 9 Sept., 1699 with his wife and daughter Letitia he sailed on the “Canterbury” for Pennsylvania. On their arrival at Philadelphia, the governor and his family went to lodge at Edward Shippen's, where they remained about a month. Penn then went to reside in what is known as the Slate-roof house, on Second street, between Chestnut and Walnut, at the southeast corner of Norris's alley, shown in the accompanying illustration. Here was born, about two months after they landed, his son John, the only one of his children that was a native of this country, who was therefore called “the American.”
Difficulties that had existed prior to his arrival
regarding the government of the province now
disappeared, and peace and order soon prevailed
throughout the colony. He gave his attention to
various reforms, and especially to the amelioration
of the condition of the Indians and negroes.
In 1701 a treaty was made with the Potomac
Indians, and also one with the Five Nations,
establishing commercial transactions between the
natives and the colonists through authorized
representatives. Information that a bill had been
introduced in the house of lords converting all of
the proprietary governments into crown colonies
led to his return to England, but on his arrival
the project that caused his leaving the colony had
been dropped. Soon afterward he sent his son
William to Philadelphia to represent him, but the
latter, disagreeing with his father, returned home.
Other troubles followed, including a false claim
against him by his steward, rather than pay which
he allowed himself to be committed to the Fleet
prison in 1708. Later he became so reduced that
he proposed to sell the colony to Queen Anne for
£20,000, and failing in this, he endeavored to
secure the promise of a salary of £600 annually as
governor. His health, seriously injured by his
confinement in the Fleet, now grew worse, and,
finding that the country air of Berkshire agreed
best with him, he settled in Ruscombe. Early in
1712 he was stricken with paralysis, and other
shocks followed that so affected him that much of
the time he was deprived of his memory and of the
power of motion. In this condition he lingered for
six years, sustained and aided by his wife, who
managed his business affairs for him. He was
buried in Jordan's burying-ground, in
Buckinghamshire, by the side of his first wife and Springett,
his first-born and favorite son. An effort was made
several years ago to have the remains of William
Penn brought to Philadelphia, to rest there
beneath some imposing monument. Penn still rests,
however, in the quiet Buckinghamshire burying-ground,
his grave marked by a simple stone. And
in the same place, of old a retreat for persecuted
Friends, lie Isaac Pennington and others famous
for their piety. In the original plan of Philadelphia,
Penn placed a square of ten acres at the
intersection of Broad and High (now Market) streets,
but in the course of time the park was absorbed
for building purposes, until only Penn square
remained, on which the Philadelphia public buildings
were long in process of construction. These
buildings when completed had, placed on the summit
of the dome, a colossal bronze statue of Penn,
thirty-six feet high. It was designed by Alexander
Calder, and weighs thirty tons. The figure is
in a speaking attitude, and the left hand is
represented as holding the original charter of the
city of Philadelphia. As the statue is intended to
personate him in his relation to the city rather
than to the state, this was deemed the most appropriate
symbol. In 1726 appeared “A Collection of
the Works of William Penn, to which is prefixed a
Journal of his Life, with many Original Letters and
Papers not before Published” (2 vols., London), and
in 1771 there were published “Select Works of
William Penn, to which is prefixed a Journal of
his Life”; also, in 1782, his “Select Works with a
Life ” were issued in five volumes, and again in
1825 in three volumes. See “Vie de Guillaume
Penn,” by Jean Marsillac (Paris, 1791; translated
into German by Carl J. Friedrich, Strasburg, 1793);
Thomas Clarkson's “Memoirs of the Public and
Private Life of William Penn” (London, 1813);
Mason L. Weerns's “Life of William Penn”
(Philadelphia, 1822); the “Life” by Joseph Barker
(London, 1852); and George E. Ellis, in Sparks's
“American Biography” (3d series, vol. xii., Boston, 1847);
Samuel M. Janney, “Life and Select Correspondence
of William Penn” (Philadelphia, 1852); William
Hepworth Dixon's “William Penn, an Historical
Biography founded on Family and State
Papers” (new ed., London, 1856); “Inquiry into the
Evidence of the Charges brought by Lord Macaulay
against William Penn,” by James Paget (Edinburgh,
1858): and “William Penn,” by Robert J.
Burdette (New York, 1882). For a full account of
William Penn's writings and of those which relate
to him, see Joseph Smith's “Catalogue of Friends'
Books,” vol. ii., pp. 282-326.—His second wife,
Hannah, d. in 1726, was the daughter of Thomas
Callowhill, a Bristol merchant. She accompanied
her husband to Pennsylvania in 1699, and divided
her time between Philadelphia and Pennsbury
Manor, a beautiful estate situated in Bucks county,
on the river Delaware. After Penn's death, during
the minority of her children, as sole executrix, she
assumed the management of the colonial affairs,
performing this difficult task with rare tact and
business capacity. Her deputy in Pennsylvania
from 1717 till 1726 was Sir William Keith (q. v.).—The
founder of Pennsylvania had several children
that died in his lifetime.—His eldest surviving
son, William, b. about 1680, d. in Liege in 1720,
came to the colony with Lieut.-Gov. Evans, arriving
2 Feb., 1704, and was made a member of the
provincial council on the 8th. As such he joined
in a declaration that a clause in his father's
instructions suspending the operation of laws passed
by the lieutenant-governor until the proprietary's
pleasure be known was illegal and void. He raised
a militia company, but, being presented before the corporation of the city of Philadelphia, the chief
men in which were unfriendly to his father, for
disorder at a tavern, he took offence and returned to
England. He was an unsuccessful candidate for
parliament. On his mother's side he was related
to the wife of Lord Fairfax, and engaged with him
and others in a project to recover sunken treasure.
By various means he added to his father's financial
embarrassment, and he had also sold in 1704 the
manor of Williamstadt, which had been laid out
for him at the founding of the colony. The estate
of Shanagarry, County Cork, Ireland, which had
descended from Admiral Penn, and certain other
property, being deemed a handsome provision for
him, all but 40,000 acres of the American estate
were left to the founder's children by his second
wife after payment of his debts, the powers of
government being devised to the Earl of Oxford and
Earl Powlett to sell; but the heir-at-law contested
this, and issued a fresh commission to the
lieutenant-governor, in which he declared himself a member
of the Church of England. By advice of the
assembly, the commission was not proclaimed.
Subsequently an order from the commissioners of trade
was obtained continuing the lieutenant-governor
in office. This William Penn left three children.—His
eldest son, Springett, b. in England; d. in
Dublin, Ireland. 8 Feb., 1731, succeeded to his
father's claims, and was by many persons considered
the rightful governor-in-chief. Sir William Keith,
the lieutenant-governor, caused a large tract of
land on the frontier to be laid out for him, and
called Springettsbury Manor. In 1725, with the
widow and executrix of the founder, he nominated
Patrick Gordon as Keith's successor, and obtained
confirmation of the appointment by the crown.
The will of the founder was established by decree
of the court of exchequer in 1727, and a
compromise between the two branches of the family was
in process of adjustment at his death. Springett's
brother and heir, William, b. in 1703; d. in Shanagarry,
Ireland, 6 Feb., 1746, executed for £5,500 a
release to John, Thomas, and Richard Penn, dated
23 Sept., 1731. He returned to the Society of
Friends on marrying Christiana, daughter of
Alexander Forbes, a merchant in London, on 7 Dec.,
1732. After her death he married Ann Vaux, 13
Dec., 1736, by whom he had an only son, who died
without issue, whereupon Christiana Gulielma,
wife of Peter Gaskell and daughter of William and
Christiana Penn, became the heiress at common
law of the founder.—William the founder's eldest
son by his second wife, John, called “the American,”
b. in Philadelphia, Pa., 29 Feb., 1700; d. in
England in October, 1746, by his mother's appointment
received half of the proprietaryship, and was
confirmed in the enjoyment of it by the paying of
the mortgage, by the annulling of the agreement
to sell the powers of government, by compromise
with the elder branch of the family, by the
establishment of a provisional boundary-line with Maryland,
and by Indian treaties that opened all the
region required for settlements. John Penn came
to Pennsylvania in September, 1734, but returned
to England the following year. During his stay he
attended the meetings of the provincial council.
He appears to have been the only descendant of
William Penn in the male line that remained a
Quaker. He died without issue, leaving his rights
in the province and lower counties to his brother
Thomas, b. in England in 1702; d. there, 21
March, 1775. Thomas had originally only one sixth
of the proprietaryship, but it was increased to a
fourth by the death of a younger brother in
infancy. To manage the estate he came to the colony
in 1732 with power of attorney from John and
Richard, and on his arrival took a seat in the council.
He remained until August, 1741.
Subsequently there was a long struggle between the
proprietaries and the assembly of Pennsylvania,
chiefly as to the taxation of the Penn estates. In
1764 the assembly petitioned the king to assume
the government, but the crown let the powers
remain with the proprietaries. Mason and Dixon's
line, run in 1767 and confirmed in 1769, ended the
boundary dispute with Maryland, and the treaty of
Fort Stanwix in 1768 extinguished the Indian
claim to the whole region of the Alleghanies from
New York to Virginia, so that Thomas Penn, with
his colleague holding a fourth interest, was the
feudal lord of more than 25,000,000 acres, nearly
a quarter of a million people, and the largest town
in the American colonies. When he was about
fifty years old he married Lady Juliana, daughter
of the first Earl of Pomfret.—Thomas's son, John,
b. in England, 23 Feb., 1760; d. in Stoke Pogis, 21
June, 1834, succeeded to his father's interests, but,
with his cousin, lost the proprietaryship and
governorship by the American Revolution. Penn was
a graduate of Cambridge, and for some time
governor of the island of Portland, where he built
Pennsylvania castle. He was a member of parliament
in 1802. He published a tragedy, some
pamphlets, and a volume of poems, and received
the degree of LL. D. from Cambridge in 1811.—His
brother, Granville, b. 9 Dec., 1761; d. in
Stoke Pogis, 28 Sept., 1844, was for some time
clerk in the war department, and reputed to be
the most learned layman in England. He was
the author of various works, among them a “Life
of Admiral Sir William Penn,” his great-grand-father.
He visited Pennsylvania. He left several
sons, all of whom died without issue, so that the
pension paid by the British government descended
to the family of his sister, Sophia Margaret, who
married William Stuart, archbishop of Armagh.—William
the founder's third son by his second wife,
Richard, b. 17 Jan., 1706; d. in England in 1771,
was also a proprietary and titular governor of
Pennsylvania and the counties of New Castle, Kent, and
Sussex on Delaware river. He married Hannah,
daughter of John Lardner, and had two sons. The
eldest, John, lieutenant-governor of Pennsylvania,
b. in London, 14 July, 1729; d. in Bucks county,
Pa., 9 Feb., 1795, married clandestinely while he
was at school, but was separated from his wife by
his uncle, Thomas Penn, and went to the continent,
finishing his education at the university in Geneva.
He was then sent to Pennsylvania, and on 6 Feb.,
1753, became a member of the provincial council,
with the rank of first member thereof, and succession
to its presidency in case of a vacancy in the
office of lieutenant-governor. He was one of the
commissioners to the congress at Albany in 1754.
He left the colony after Braddock's defeat, but seven
years afterward returned as lieutenant-governor,
arriving on 30 Oct., 1763. The first year of his
term witnessed a state of affairs that threatened
the existence of civil government. The assembly,
controlled by the Quakers, failed to satisfy the
Scotch-Irish on the frontier, who saw large sums
of money lavished in presents to Indians while
they lay destitute from an Indian war. In December,
1763, the more desperate of the young men
about Paxton banded together, destroyed a peaceable
Indian village at Conestoga, and scalped all
whom they found at home. The remainder of the
tribe were placed by the authorities in the Lancaster
work-house for protection, while a proclamation
was issued for the arrest of the murderers; but a few days later a troop of horsemen broke into the
building and massacred its inmates. Penn issued
a proclamation offering a reward for the capture
of the murderers; but this had no effect. A
battalion of regular soldiers was ordered to Lancaster,
and, by the united efforts of all citizens, a bold front
was presented when the “Paxton boys” appeared
at Germantown on their way to murder the Bethlehem
Indians, who had been housed in the barracks
in the Northern Liberties. This outbreak had
barely subsided before the young governor was
embroiled with the assembly on an offshoot of the
old quarrel as to the taxation of proprietary lauds.
This brought about the petition to change the
government from proprietary to royal. Upon the
repeal of the stamp-act he congratulated the assembly,
and gave a fête at “Lansdowne,” his country-seat,
now within Fairmount park. He declined
to be patron of the Philosophical society because
it had chosen Benjamin Franklin for its president.
The happiest event of Penn's administration was
the treaty with the Indians at Fort Stanwix in
1768. On the death of his father he embarked for
England on 4 May, 1771, leaving the government
to the council; but in August, 1773, he returned to
Pennsylvania as governor in his own right and by
deputation from his uncle. In respect to the
Revolutionary contest, he attempted to steer a
middle course. He was opposed to taxation without
representation, but his first overt act might
have caused the ministry to replace the proprietary
by a royal government. In February, 1775,
he besought the assembly to send a petition from
their own body seeking redress of grievances.
On 30 June of that year the assembly, without
troubling Penn for his consent, provided for arming
the province, and appointed a committee of
safety, which thenceforth was supreme in Pennsylvania;
but Penn's council continued to meet until
the following September. Within a month after
the Declaration of Independence a constitutional
convention met, and vested the government of
Pennsylvania in a supreme executive council,
choosing its own president and the officers of state.
Penn offered no other resistance than refusal to
recognize the new authority. Nevertheless, when
Howe's army was expected in Philadelphia, it was
thought inexpedient to leave such important
instruments in British hands as a regularly commissioned
governor and chief justice; so Chew and
himself were arrested, 12 Aug., 1777, on the
recommendation of congress, but they were released on
15 May, 1778. On 28 June, 1779, the legislature of
Pennsylvania transferred to the state the property
in the soil, restricted the possessions of the Penns
to such manors, or tenths, as had been set apart for
them prior to the Declaration of Independence, and
also their purchases from private parties, and
abolished quit-rents except within the manors. It
voted in remuneration for this the sum of £130,000
to the heirs and devisees of Thomas and Richard
Penn, to be paid three years after the establishment
of peace. In addition, the British government
created an annuity of £4,000, which has only
recently been commuted. John Penn's branch of
the family was entitled to a fourth of these sums,
and the estates in Philadelphia and elsewhere
were considerable; so that he was enabled to live
comfortably the rest of his life at “Lansdowne,”
or at his city residence. He was buried ander the
floor of Christ church, Philadelphia, but his remains
were afterward removed to England.—A grandson
of the founder, son of Richard, was Richard,
lieutenant-governor of Pennsylvania, b. in England in
1735; d. in Richmond, Surrey, England, 27 May,
1811, spent some time at St. John's college,
Cambridge, and was intended for the legal profession,
but relinquished that study. He accompanied his
brother to Pennsylvania in 1763, and was qualified
as a councillor on 12 Jan., 1764. After an absence
of two years in England he was appointed by his
uncle and brother lieutenant-governor of Pennsylvania,
and arriving the second time in Philadelphia
on 16 Oct., 1771, made himself the most popular of
his family. All his dealings with the provincial
assembly were very friendly. Armor, in his “Lives
of the Governors,” says: “He was especially attentive
to the commercial interests of the colony, and
during his administration a degree of unexampled
prosperity prevailed.” He had a dispute with his
brother concerning his father's will, and for some
time after the arrival of John, by whom he was
superseded in the governorship in August, 1773,
Richard did not meet him, but the two were finally
reconciled. Richard Penn's feelings were enlisted
against the oppressive acts of the British government.
Both Penns longed for concessions, but
Richard's situation being more independent, he
could afford to be more demonstrative. He entertained
the members of the Continental congress at
his house, George Washington being among his
guests. He left Philadelphia in the summer of
1775, carrying with him the second petition of
congress to the king. On 7 Nov., 1775, its
consideration being the order of the day in the house
of lords, the Duke of Richmond, observing Mr.
Penn below the bar, moved that he be examined,
to authenticate it. Accordingly, after some discussion,
he was sworn on the 10th, and testified to the
ability and willingness of his colony to resist the
home government. He was member of the British
parliament from 1796 to 1806. His fortunes
improved, and he visited Philadelphia in 1808. By
his wife, Mary Masters, a Pennsylvania heiress, he
had several children, who died without issue.—The
eldest, William, b. 23 June, 1776; d. in Nelson
Square, Southwark, England, 17 Sept., 1845,
entered St. John's college, Cambridge, but left the
university without taking a degree, and devoted
himself to literature, but became very intemperate.
He came to Pennsylvania in 1808, spending some
time in Philadelphia and elsewhere in the state,
marrying in Philadelphia. After his return to
England he was for a long time imprisoned for debt.—His
brother, Richard, d. in Richmond, England,
21 April, 1863, was for many years employed in the
British colonial department, and was author of
“Maxims and Hints on Angling, Chess, Shooting,
and other Matters, also Miseries of Fishing.” He
was a fellow of the Royal society.