First City. Gary B. Nash
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Название: First City

Автор: Gary B. Nash

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия: Early American Studies

isbn: 9780812202885

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ and commonplace books as well as hundreds of documents concerning Indian relations, the long boundary dispute with the proprietor of Maryland, Lord Baltimore, and many other aspects of colonial Pennsylvania history. Rich additions to the Penn material have been made in the early twentieth century by gift, and a huge addition—the correspondence between Penn and two of his most trusted officials in Pennsylvania in the years immediately after he left the colony in 1684—would come in the 1980s from the descendants of Benjamin Chew, another of the most important colonial officials of Pennsylvania. The five-volume edition of the most important papers and essays of William Penn prepared in the 1980s is built on these various collections (although the editors located hundreds of other items scattered throughout the world).

      In promoting his colony Penn relied on two kinds of documents: vivid descriptions of the land and of the terms of settlement, and maps of the region. Penn wasted no time on the former, issuing Some Account of the Province of Pennsylvania in America in London in 1681. In this suitably optimistic account, he described what he had never seen: a land on the same latitude as Naples, Italy or Montpelier, France with fertile soil, fish-filled rivers, and wildlife in abundance. Here was a place for industrious farmers and urban artisans—all those who were “clogged and oppress’d about a Livelyhood,” all the “younger Brothers of small Inheritances”—and for servants, who were promised fifty acres of good land after their term of servitude was over.

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      Many promotional tracts would flow from Penn’s hand over the next few years, but a map of Pennsylvania proved harder to obtain. The proprietor sent his friend Thomas Holme to survey eastern Pennsylvania, and along with him went John Ladd, whose surveying instruments ended up in the Chicago Historical Society, which donated them to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania just 300 years after Ladd arrived on the Delaware. Holme and Ladd worked for five years surveying the site of Philadelphia and the original counties of Philadelphia, Bucks, and Chester. After Penn returned to London, he called again and again for the map. “All cry out, where is your map, what no map of your Settlements?” he wrote in September 1686 to Holme.14 Finally it came the following year—a monumental map (Figure 6) showing the land granted to 670 early settlers, with some tracts of land left unlabeled because of disputed land titles. It was quickly engraved on six plates and sold by Quaker booksellers in London.

      Penn’s attempts to draft a frame of government were no less difficult. How did one devise a system of government that guaranteed a more just, peaceful, and equal society? Penn could do nothing by decree, and even the extensive powers granted him in his charter from the king were only as good as his settlers’ willingness to accept them. Like all utopia builders, Penn had to consult, cajole, and compromise in constructing his “frame of government.” Many interested parties advised and lobbied Penn in organizing the civil system under which colonists would live. Penn published an early version in London in 1681, one of twenty drafts of the Frame of Government finally hammered out the next year. But to his dismay, a ratifying convention, meeting at Chester in December 1682, shortly after Penn arrived in his colony, rejected the document because it gave too much power to the governor and council and too little to the elected assembly. It was hardly the golden age that the founders of the Historical Society remembered and wanted fellow Philadelphians to recall.

       Pacifism and Indian Relations

      “… the king of the Countrey where I live, hath given unto me a great Province therein, but I desire to enjoy it with your Love and Consent, that we may always live together as Neighbours and friends.”15 In this single sentence, written to Lenape chiefs of the Delaware Valley, Penn dissociated himself from nearly two hundred years of violent European colonization in the Americas. He imagined colonization without conquest in the sylvan woods granted by his king, though no precedent for this existed.

      The Historical Society did not have the scholarly interest in the Indian languages, customs, and human traits held by American Philosophical Society members. However, Historical Society leaders were deeply invested in preserving the writings and artifacts related to Indian-white relations. Just treatment of the Indians and the covenant of friendship Penn established with them gave Quakers historical legitimacy earned by no other aspect of their lives. Also, Penn’s amity with the Indians stood in sharp contrast to the forcible sending of the Five Civilized Nations west along the “trail of tears” in the 1830s and the blood-drenched Indian wars west of the Mississippi River a generation later. Cultivating the memory of the founder’s uniqueness in Indian relations also gave the Society of Friends missionary work among western Indian nations throughout the nineteenth century a special resonance. The Philosophical Society publicized its ethnological and philological studies of Indians, while the Historical Society capitalized on the Quaker treatment of Indians. The lesson was not lost on President Ulysses S. Grant, who in 1869, seeking to reform the government’s treatment of western Native Americans, appointed Friends to direct the effort. Among those sent to the Great Plains were Samuel M. Janney, biographer of William Penn and author of other histories of the Quakers.

      Within its first decade, the Historical Society acquired important Indian materials, including some of the writings of John Heckewelder, the Moravian missionary who had translated three Indian languages into English. Penn’s 1681 manuscript letter, “To the Kings of the Indians,” was a more poignant and usable piece. In it, Penn assured the Lenape of his good intentions and promised that the colony would have no walled forts, the symbols of interracial conflict to the north and south. “… the great God … hath made us not to devoure and destroy one an other but live Soberly and kindly together in the world … I have great love and regard towards you, and I desire to Winn and gain your love & friendship by a kind, just and peaceable life.”16 Penn also intended that such assurances would instill confidence in prospective settlers, who knew from reports published in England that up and down the Atlantic seaboard, from Maine to South Carolina, a devastating series of Indian wars had been fought just a few years before. Published in London in 1681, the manuscript letter would not be donated to the Historical Society until 1891, a year after the Wounded Knee Massacre ended the Great Plains Indian wars.

      Other treasured acquisitions could solidify remembrance of the Quakers’ attempt to show that, by disavowing violence and practicing fair dealing, people of different cultures could live together. The deed from the Lenape for approximately one hundred square miles of present-day Bucks County, negotiated by Penn’s deputy William Markham in the summer of 1682, was not acquired until 1867, but it was frequently displayed to refresh the public’s memory of Quaker benevolence and fair play. Signed with marks by twelve Indian leaders, it is the first known written agreement in Pennsylvania between native people and Penn’s agents. There is more than a little irony in the fact that among the trade goods Markham agreed to exchange for the vast tract of land were guns and liquor. Markham was unaware that four of the Lenape chiefs had earlier sold a portion of this same tract to New York’s governor, Edmund Andros. Like other American Indian leaders, the Lenape chiefs did not view a deed as a complete surrender of land but rather as permission for white newcomers to use the land and live there with indigenous people.

      Historians and anthropologists have pointed out that the peaceful relations between the Quakers and Lenape lasting throughout Penn’s lifetime were not simply the triumph of pacifist ideology. Much to the advantage of Quaker farmers seeking fertile land, the Delaware River valley may have СКАЧАТЬ