REMARKS OF
WILLIAM PENN
100th MICHENER-WORTHINGTON FAMILY
INTRODUCTION:
Greetings,
Friends! I am William Penn, founder and proprietor of this colony.
Much
has changed since I left here in 1701. For example, there are so many more
people, so many more inhabitants who enjoy the right to religious toleration.
In fact, on my way here, I noticed a large sign outside a Catholic Church which
announced tomorrow’s sermon. It was titled: “Did you ever wonder what hell is
like?” Then, in smaller letters below, were the words: “Come hear our Church
Choir!
Does
anybody still wonder why the early Quakers didn’t have music in the Meeting
House!
We
are gathered here today to celebrate two of the earliest settlers of my
colony—John Michener and Sarah Moore—and their descendants, who now, I
understand total more than 67,000. Impressive!
(applaud)
PENN’S RE
I
had been acquainted with Sarah since she was twelve years old. Orphaned at an
early age, she came to live with our family in 1676 at Worminghurst
in
My
wife, Gulielma Springett,
found her to be a most able maid-servant, a great help to her as she was still
grieving over the loss of our first three children while having to tend to two
others.
As
Sarah’s master, I was responsible for her welfare and by the early 1680’s, was
concerned that she had become a spinster. That changed in 1685, when John
Michener, a young man, from Ash of Normandy in
Tho’
he was a poor Friend, John appeared to me to be a good and honest man and I
noticed that Sarah took a liking to him. A year later they declared their
intentions to marry to the Dorking and Horsham Monthly Meeting.
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I
am happy to say that John and Sarah were wed on the fifth day of August in a
public and solemn ceremony at my estate in Worminghurst.
It was the only wedding that ever took place there.
Shortly
after, I wrote a letter of introduction for John and Sarah to James Harrison,
my secretary at my
QUESTION: “Why do you suppose John
Michener and Sarah Moore would leave
They
were young, of course. No doubt in search of adventure and willing to take a
risk. Those who came to
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“HOLY EXPERIMENT”:
My
own risk began on
It
was a tract of land almost as large as all of
But
most important, there was unsettled wilderness where an example could be set up
to all other nations of a just society free from the religious intolerance,
arbitrary authority, and wars of
‘Twas a clear and just thing, I believed, to resettle there,
for God who has given it to me through many difficulties would bless and make
it the seed of a nation.
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Indeed,
If
my Holy Experiment was to succeed, however, I realized that I had to ensure a
broad based and stable society. Therefore, I encouraged three sorts of people
to settle in
The
first group was limited to purchasers of 5,000 acres or more. This small but
influential group consisted primarily of Quakers.
The
second group was composed of large numbers of yeomen and artisans. These were
needed to transform the wilderness into a prosperous community, but since they
had no capital, they would have to pay quitrents.
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Third,
was the class of indentured servants. These people agreed to do work for a
period of years in exchange for their passage to the colony. At the end of
their indenture, each would receive 50 acres of land.
QUESTION: To which group do you think
John Michener and Sarah Moore belonged?
They
were a part of the second group. As a farmer, John was a yeoman. Sarah had been
a servant under my care. When she was married, her period of indenture ended
and I provided her with passage to
Tho’
they had a yeoman’s status, the couple did not have their own property until
1702. It was a small plot of ground in the Town of
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FRAME OF GOVERNMENT:
During
this time, I was engaged in the business of constitution-making. I realized
that if my Holy Experiment were to succeed, I would also need a government to
protect the religious and political freedoms upon which it was based.
After
toiling over 17 drafts of a Frame of
Government—some more democratic than others—I arrived at a constitution
that organized the government into three parts: a governor, a Provincial
Council, and a bicameral Assembly elected by the landholders or freemen.
While
the Upper House drafted legislation, the Lower House passed on it. In this way
I hoped to avoid factions and prevent corruption in government.
It
was, after all, only fitting that the people be given a voice in government.
Government, like clocks, goes from the motion that men give them. As
governments are made and moved by men, so by them are they ruined, too. Let men be good and the government cannot be bad, and
if it becomes ill, good men will cure it.
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QUESTION: Now, of course, John and Sarah
Michener were good people and I have already told you that they enjoyed the
status of yeoman, or independent farmer. But do you think that status entitled
them to become freemen? That is, to vote or to hold public office in my colony?
No,
it certainly did not! But lest you, their descendants, think that you are better than they were, let us see how
many of you would enjoy the status of
a freeman in
GROUP EXERCISE: All those over the age of 21,
please raise your hand and keep it up until you are disqualified. If you are
female, please put your hand down. If you are Catholic or Jewish, please put
your hand down. If you are not white or Caucasian, please put your hand down.
If you do not own at least 100 acres of property, please put your hand down.
Quite
a humbling exercise! I can see that few of you would qualify to be freemen.
Only white, male Protestants over the age of 21 and owning significant land had
a political influence.
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Regardless
of political status, all settlers enjoyed the right to worship; the right to
open courts of justice with trial by jury; and the right to send their children
to my
RISKS OF LIFE IN EARLY
I
should remind you that life was not without difficulty for many who settled in
the colony, though. Medical science was primitive and many families lost
newborns within a year’s time. In 1696, John and Sarah lost a baby girl, Mary.
Farming
was not always a stable or prosperous trade. A poor harvest or two could result
in financial debt, especially if there was a family to support. And by 1701,
John had six children: Sarah; Rebecca and Hannah, who were twins; William;
John; and Elizabeth.
Through
little fault of his own, John Michener had fallen into great debt by 1715.
Unable to provide for his family in
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“HOLY CONVERSATION” &
IMPORTANCE OF FAMILY:
At
the same time, I believe
Of
the six children, we know that the four daughters—Sarah, Rebecca, Hannah, and
Elizabeth—married well. All of them wed landholders who held the status of
freeman, either at Horsham or Byberry.
The
two sons—William and John—also became landholders in
Most
important, each one of the 6 children had their own family and continued to
cultivate the principles of the Quaker faith among their own children.
Why
is that so important? The early Friends believed that the family was the
foundation of the community. Not the government. Not the school. Not even the
Meeting itself.
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Those
institutions were only as good as the people who founded and composed them. It
was the family that was ultimately responsible for the character, behavior, and
morals of the members within it.
To
live in “Holy Conversation” was the greatest reward a Quaker could desire.
It
meant to remain true to the principles of Friends: the non-violent resolution
of conflict; the leading of a simple, Christian life; to respect others equally
for their humanity as you would have them respect you; and to speak truth to
power, even if there are personal risks involved.
Essentially,
to live in “Holy Conversation” is to live a life in integrity. And, ultimately,
the family is the only institution that can best model that virtue.
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CONCLUDING
PRAYER:
Today,
then, we celebrate the greatest achievement of John Michener and Sarah
Moore—the propagation of their family for more than 10 generations.
Whether
you realize it or not, all of you are also the stewards of the same Holy
Experiment on which they embarked more than 300 years ago.
And
so, I would like to end with a prayer, dear Friends, for you and for your
families:
“My
soul prays to God for thee that thou may stand in the day of trial; that thy
children may be blest of the Lord; and thee saved by
His power. May God bless thee and keep thee.”
Thy
Friend,
William
Penn
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