b. 1644-10-14
d. 1718-07-30
Penn is famous for his peaceful settlement with the Lenni Lenape people of the Delaware
region. This negotiation, known as the treaty of Shackamaxon, has been recorded (and
re-recorded) as the fairest page in American history.
Penn himself boasted that, when the purchase was agreed, great promises passed between us of kindness and good
neighbourhood, and that the Indians and English must live in love, as long as the
sun gave light.
Although the original treaty document was destroyed by a fire during the American
Civil War, a wampum belt, presented to Penn in commemoration of the treaty, is preserved
by the Pennsylvania Historical Society at the Atwater Kent Museum of Philadelphia.
William Penn was born in London on October 14, 1644. Despite the objections of his father, Sir William Penn, he became a Quaker in 1667. Penn was incarcerated on multiple occasions for religious dissent. He is well known
as the founder of the state of Pennsylvania where he attempted to create a utopian
society free of religious intolerance. Penn died in England on July 30, 1718.
- 1. H. Butterworth, The Wampum Belt; Or, 'The Fairest Page of History' A Tale of William Penn's Treaty
with the Indians (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1896), iii-v.
- 2. J. R. Soderlund ed., William Penn and the Founding of Pennsylvania 1680-1684: A Documentary History (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983), 316.
- 3. K. Milano, Peace Treaty, Penn Treaty Museum Online.
- 4. J. R. Soderlund, Penn, William, American National Biography.