Notes |
- John Penn ("the American")
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Penn (February 29, 1700 – October 25, 1746) was a proprietor of colonial Pennsylvania. He was the eldest son of the colony's founder, William Penn, by his second wife, Hannah Callowhill Penn. He was the only one of Penn's children to be born in the New World (in the Slate Roof House in Philadelphia) and was hence called "the American" by his family.
Life
John Penn was raised by a cousin in Bristol, England, where he learned the trade of merchant in the linen trade. As a result of his father's will and by his mother's appointment, he received half of the proprietorship of Pennsylvania.
He returned to Pennsylvania in September 1734, and attended the meetings of the Pennsylvania Provincial Council, but went back to England in 1735, to support the colony's rights in the boundary dispute with Maryland. The ultimate resolution of this dispute was the surveying of the Mason-Dixon Line. Penn, his brother Thomas, and their agents were responsible for the infamous "Walking Purchase", which swindled the Lenape Indians out of more than one million acres (400,000 ha) of Pennsylvania.
He never married and died in Hitcham, Buckinghamshire, England, without issue, and was buried at Jordans. His will left his rights in the province and lower counties to his brother Thomas Penn.
This work is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Penn_%28%22the_American%22%29 [1]
|