.Mil LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 0014311 1647 4 F 152 .2 .Ml? Copy 1 WILLIAM PENN AN ADDRESS DELIVEKED BEFORE THE PEN N CLUB OF PHILADELPHIA October 27, 1877 THE ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF TUE LANDI^G AT UPLAND BY WAYNE MAC VEAGH PHILADELPHIA COLLINS, PRINTER, 705 JAYNE STREET 1877 WILLIAM PENN AN ADDRESS DELIVERED BEFORE TH E PEN N CLUB OF PHILADELPHIA October 27, 1877 THE ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY-EIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE LANDING AT UPLAND BY WAYNE MAC VEAGH PHILADELPHIA COLLINS, PRINTER, 7 05 JAYNE STREET 1877 r I sz. Souroe tiakaovit J ADDRESS .Gentlemen: The Executive Committee of the Penn Club tliought it not unbecoming to gather its friends together upon this anniver- sary of the landing of him whose name it bears upon the soil of the State lie founded; and their partiality has devolved upon me the agreeable duty of expressing the gratification the members of the Club feel at your presence, and the heartiness of the welcome thej' desire to proffer you. They are especially glad to receive the learned members of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania-, and to avail themselves of this opportunity to bear their testimony to the inestimable value of the distinguished services that society has already rendered, and the services more distinguished, if possible, which it is destined to render in enlio-htenino; and elevatino- the patriotism of the citizens of the imperial Commonwealth, whose early history it has caused to be investigated with so much patience and illustrated with so great discernment. It is, indeed, no less an authority than my Lord Bacon, who, in "the true marshalling of the sovereign degrees of honor," assigns "the first place to the conditores imperioriim, founders of States and Commonwealths ;" and cultivated communities have always commemorated with pride the virtues of the heroic men who hiid the foundations of their strength and greatness. A[>art, however, from any patriotic interest in it natural to us, the story of American Colonization is one of the most interesting and attractive episodes in human history. It was an age of marvellous ambition and of marvellous achievement; and except those sunny years at Atliens during which the human spirit attained and preserved the serenest and completcst culture it has ever known, [lerhaps blood was never less sluggish, thought never less commonplace, lives never less monotonous than in the early days of the settlement of America. Great scientific discoveries had filled the minds of men with thirst for wider knowledge. Mechanical inventions of price- less value had awakened in them an eager desire to avail themselves of the advantages of those inventions. By the aid of movable types wise books could be cheaply printed. By the aid of the mariner's compass great shi[)S could be safely sailed. By the aid of gunpowder virgin lands could be rescued from savage tribes. The illustrious names of that illustrious time crowd upon our recollection, for their renown still fills the world, and their surpassing excellence still kindles the flame of a generous emulation in all the leading departments of virtuous human effort — in art, in adventure, in discovery of new lands, in philosophy, in poetry, in searching for the secrets of nature, in subjecting the forces of nature to the will of man, in heroism in war by sea and by land, in sacrifices for liberty of conscience. It cannot, therefore, do us harm to stand, as it were, a little while in the presence of any eminent man of that formative period, and by the contemplation of his spirit to quicken our own, as by coals of fire from oft' an altar. In Sir Thomas More's portrayal of tlie perfect State we are told that " they set up in the market-place the images of such men as had been bountiful benefactors to the Commonwealth for the perpetual memory of their good acts ; and also that the glory and renown of the ancestors might stir and provoke their posterity to virtue." This is an anniversary of the most momentous event in the eventful career of him who has been our most bountiful benefactor, and we may wisely, therefore, withdraw a few moments from the social enjoyments of the evening to look once more upon a likeness of our founder. It is trae that when he landed at Upland, he entered into possession of a Province, which had before attracted the attention of great statesmen, and had been selected by them as the theatre of a novel and lofty experiment in government ; for it was here that Gustavus Adolphiis hoped to secure a city of refuge for the oppressed, and the sagacious Oxenstiern hoped to realize his beneficent scheme of colonization; and it was here that Christina had founded a l^ew Sweden, whose simple-minded, pious, and frugal citizens purchased the lands they coveted and tilled them with their own hands, living in peace with all their neighbors; but, nevertheless, the coming of William Penn was the founding of Pennsylvania, and in spite of all abate- ment, though he was flawed For Adam, much more, Christ, yet he was eminently worthy of the greatness of his trust. He had inherited a distinguished name and a great oppor- tunity. His grandfather had been a captain in the English merchant service in the latter years of the reign of Elizabeth, when that service was perhaps the best school which ever ex- 3 6 isted to render men alert, brave, self-reliant, and capable of confronting any peril with an equal mind. His father had been reared in the same school, and had developed, at a very- early age, remarkable capacity for naval warftire. To this capacit}^ he added a handsome presence, courtly manners, and such political virtue as was not incompatible with regard- ing his own advancement as the principal duty of his life. At twenty-one he was a captain in the English navy, at thirty- one he was Vice- Admiral of England, at thirty-four he was a member of Parliament, at forty-three he was captain com- mander under the Duke of York, and he died shortly after his retirement from tbe Naval Board, before he had attained fifty years of age. The rapiditj' of his promotion to great offices is very remarkable, when it is remembered that he served the Parliament, Charles I, the Lord Protector, and Charles II and continued to rise steadily, notwithstanding the civil war and the frequent changes of administration it produced. He was quite evidently a worldly-minded man, but he was also wise with the wisdom of the world, and by adding to his great services the favor of his sovereign, he laid the foundations of a noble house, needing only for its security that his son should follow in his footsteps, and with filial piety accept the wealth and rank and fame which were proffered him. The son had been born near the Tower of London while his father was sailing down the Thames to join Lord Warwick in the Irish Seas, and had passed his childhood with his mother, Margaret Jasper, of Rotterdam, at their country house at Wan- stead in Essex. lie was only eleven years of age when his father returned from the fruitless attack upon Hispaniola and was consigned to the Tower by Cromwell, but even at that early age he was profoundly impressed by his father's misfortune. When about sixteen years of age lie was sent to Oxford, and was matriculated as a gentleman commoner at Christ Church. At that time tlie world certainly appeared to be opening before his youthful vision in undimmed radiance and beauty. The son of a great admiral, who was also a great favorite of the King and of his royal brother, he entered upon his academical career under the most brilliant auspices. Fond of studj' and athletic sports, a diligent reader and a good boatman, he easily won his way to the esteem of his teachers and the regard of his fellows, and for a time he satisfied all expectations; but for students of high intelligence and sensitive conscience, venerable and beautiful Oxford, " spreading her gardens to the moonlight, and whispering from her towers the last enchant- ments of the Middle Age," possesses a charm which may be a danger. Walking in the spacious meadows of his college, or meditating beneath her noble elms, William Penn became pos- sessed by the genius of the place, for the chief university of the world has always been " the home of lost causes, and for- saken beliefs, and unpopular names, and impossible loyalties." It was while under the influence of this spirit that he was attracted by the doctrines of George Fox, and for his stubborn loyalty to what he was then pleased to call his convictions he was tinally expelled. To withdraw him as much as possible from the thoughts upon which he was at that time intent, his father sent him to the Continent, and at Paris he was presented at the court of the Grand Monarch and heartily welcomed. He entered with becoming spirit into the enjoyments of the French Capital, and proved his title to its citizenship by fighting a duel in its streets. Thence he went to the famous College of Saumur, where he finished those liberal studies which made him not only un accomplished linguist, but a man of most varied and generous t;ulture. lie afterwards travelled through France and Italy, and returned to England to dance attendance at White- hall for a brief period, and to share in the perils of a naval engagement on board the flag-ship of his father. He after- wards devoted some attention to the law as a student at Lin- coln's Inn, but he soon joined the staff" of the Duke of Ormond, then Viceroy of Ireland. While acting in this capacity he saw some military service, and apparently contracted a strong desire to devote himself to the career of a soldier. Indeed, he earnestly and repeatedly sought his father's permission to enter the British armj^, but this permission was steadily refused. It was at this interesting period of his life that the authentic portrait of him now in possession of our Historical Society was painted — a portrait which dispels many of the mistaken opin- ions of his person and his character generally entertained. It presents him to us, clad in armor, of frank countenance, and features delicate and beautiful but resolute, with his hair " long and parted in the centre of his forehead" — " falling over his shoulders in massive natural ringlets." It bears the date of his twenty-second birthday, and the martial motto, Pax qucei'i- iur bello. It is to William Peun, as presented by this portrait, that I especially desire to attract your attention this evening, to William Penn as an accomplished cavalier, a ripe scholar, a brave soldier, and in the full glow of liis youthful beauty — the product of the quiet years of motherly companionship at Wan- stead, of the restless, aspiring, combative years at Christ Church, of the gay society of Paris, of the studious vigils at Saumur, of Italian air and sky, of the depraved court at Whitehall, of the chambers of Lincoln's Inn, of the vice-regal staft' at Dublin, of the joy of battle on tlie deck beside liis father in the Channel, or joining as a volunteer in the attack at Carrickfergus. This portrait fitly represents him in mail, for his life thence- forward was one long battle, relieved only by the brief repose of his courtship and his honeymoon in the attractive and his- toric circle in which he found his wife, a circle which included Isaac Pennington, Thomas Ellwood, and John Milton. It is not my purpose, as it is not my privilege, to detain you upon this occasion with any elaborate statement of his subse- quent life or any elaborate estimate of his character. Ample opportunity will be afforded in the recurrence of this anniver- sary and the celebration of it, for the diligent liistorical stu- dents who honor us with their presence to-night to arrange the details of that life in lucid order, and to praise that charac- ter with discriminating eulogy. Their main outlines only con- cern us now, but those outlines are full of instruction and of interest for us all. We know, and we are glad to know, that his desire to be useful to his fellow-men could not exhaust itself even by preaching the Gospel, as he understood it, in season and out of season, but that to this great labor of love he added other like labors scarcely less great. He defended the rights of con- science. He defended the liberties of Englishmen. He defended the privileges of jurymen. His first plea for tolera- tion w^as in behalf of the sect, with which he had the least sympath}'. In obedience to his convictions of the truth of the creed he professed he endured the anger of his father, the loss of a peerage, separation from home, opprobrium and con- tumely from men, and frequent and prolonged imprisonment. While his spirit was being purified by suffering, his mind was 3 10 being widened by bioli converse witb John Locke and Alger- non Sidney ; and at last, when all obstacles to the trial of the experiment of his principles of government upon a virgin soil were overcome, he could truthfully exclaim, as he received the royal charter for his Province: " Grod hath given it to me in the face of the world. ... He will bless and make it the seed of a nation." It was, therefore, very precious freight which the good ship Welcome brought to these shores the day whose anniversary we celebrate, for it carried the sublime religious and political principles of William Penn and the illimitable influences of his wise and beneficent government, whose corner-stone was civic peace, born of justice, and whose capstone was religious liberty, born of toleration. There was doubtless much in his life which w^ns inconsistent with the highest standards of the religion he professed, but this inconsistency he shared with every man wlio professes the Christian faith, and the contradictions in his career are easily reconciled in the light of his youth and early manhood, but his virtue and his glory are his alone; for, in the seven- teenth century, he discovered and proclaimed the political utility of liberty, of justice, of peace, of a free press, and a liberal system of education — the principles upon which rest the blessings of the present, and the hopes of the future of the human race. Whenever, therefore, we are pained with the perusal of the sad record of his later years, the ingratitude he experienced, the embarrassments he suffered, the injustice he endured, as we follow his declining steps to the undistinguished grave where he lies buried, we may see, as in retrospect, the long pathway by which he travelled thither, and learn the secret 11 of the divine inspiration by which the young soKHlt at its beginning was transformed before its close into an immortal benefactor of mankind. Friend of liberty, friend of justice, friend of peace, apostle of God, Live and take comfort! Thou hast left behind Powers which will work for thee Thou hast great allies ; Thy friends are exultations, agonies, and love, And man's unconquerable mind. LIBRftRY OF CONGRESS 014 311 164 7 LIBRARY OF CONGRES 0014311 16474 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 0014311 1647^