Toleration and Diversity in Pennsylvania

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Section Chronology

Quaker missionaries encouraged immigrants from the European continent, and many came, giving Pennsylvania greater ethnic diversity than any other English colony except New York. The Quaker colony prospered, and the capital city, Philadelphia, soon rivaled New York as a center of commerce. By 1700, the city’s five thousand inhabitants participated in a thriving trade exporting flour and other food products to the West Indies and importing English textiles and manufactured goods.

Penn was determined to live in peace with the Indians who inhabited the region. His Indian policy expressed his Quaker ideals and contrasted sharply with the hostile policies of the other English colonies. As he explained to the chief of the Lenni Lenape (Delaware) Indians, “God has written his law in our hearts, by which we are taught and commanded to love and help and do good to one another … [and] I desire to enjoy [Pennsylvania lands] with your love and consent.” Penn instructed his agents to obtain the Indians’ consent by purchasing their land, respecting their claims, and dealing with them fairly.

Penn declared that the first principle of government was that every settler would “enjoy the free possession of his or her faith and exercise of worship towards God.” Accordingly, Pennsylvania tolerated Protestant sects of all kinds as well as Roman Catholicism. All voters and officeholders had to be Christians, but the government did not compel settlers to attend religious services, as in Massachusetts, or to pay taxes to maintain a state-supported church, as in Virginia.

Despite its toleration and diversity, Pennsylvania was as much a Quaker colony as New England was a stronghold of Puritanism. Penn had no hesitation about using civil government to enforce religious morality. One of the colony’s first laws provided severe punishment for “all such offenses against God, as swearing, cursing, lying, profane talking, [and] drunkenness … which excite the people to rudeness, cruelty, looseness, and irreligion.”

As proprietor, Penn had extensive powers subject only to review by the king. He appointed a governor, who maintained the proprietor’s power to veto any laws passed by the colonial council, which was elected by property owners who possessed at least one hundred acres of land or who paid taxes. The council had the power to originate laws and administer all the affairs of government. A popularly elected assembly served as a check on the council; its members had the authority to reject or approve laws framed by the council.

Penn stressed that the exact form of government mattered less than the men who served in it. In Penn’s eyes, “good men” staffed Pennsylvania’s government because Quakers dominated elective and appointive offices. Quakers, of course, differed among themselves. Members of the assembly struggled to win the right to debate and amend laws, especially tax laws. They finally won the battle in 1701 when a new Charter of Privileges gave the proprietor the power to appoint the council and in turn stripped the council of all its former powers and gave them to the assembly, which became the only single-house legislature in all the English colonies.

CHAPTER LOCATOR

Why did the Puritans immigrate to North America?

How did New England society change during the seventeenth century?

What was distinctive about the middle colonies?

What was the connection between the colonies and the English empire?

Conclusion: Was there an English model of colonization in North America?

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