William Payne is a great man who made a great contribution to this country. John Molletta's "William Pain and Quaker Legacy" talks about Payne's courageous efforts and his views on things. Pain is a spiritual man who believes in God and wants to have a peaceful society to live alone. He wishes that everyone is equal and democratic, he is a brave man. Suspicion of religious tolerance in Pennsylvania has changed the views of many people who lived at that time. In this article we discuss the background of the Pain, the importance of the Quaker Association, and its social development, for his view on religious tolerance.
William Payne, Admiral Royal Admiral, William Pain 's son was also an early convert of William Pain and a founder of religion, a friend of George Fox. Like many members of the early friends association, the pen faced imprisonment and persecution for his creed, due to his family position he was not strictly treated in the British justice system . Penn was an initial investor in the United States and later co-owned most of the assets that became New Jersey and the other 14 Quaker investors. For his investment in New Jersey, the pen began to develop another colony in the Americas, and Quaker and other persecuted European religious minorities can coexist. After his father's death, Payne took over Charles II originally a huge debt owed to his father due to several loans to the crown and years of unpaid wages.
William Paine (1644 - 1718) was a member of the British Friends Association (Quakers). His father, Admiral William Payne, was a wealthy Englishman who lent quite a money to the king. When Admiral passed away at the University of Pennsylvania, his son asked Charles II to allow him to establish colonies in the United States. The king agreed, William Pain canceled the debt of the king. Pennsylvania wants to name the colony "West Frya", but Charles II proposed to make it the state of Pennsylvania. Admiral Payne's honor
William Penn (1644-1718) William Penn is an unusual Quaker. Most Quakers have a relatively modest career and have received little formal education, but the University of Pennsylvania is educated in Oxford and is a member of an elite and wealthy family. His father was a former admiral of the British Navy and was a close friend of the King Charles II who had a large asset in Ireland and the UK. Although he grew up in a traditional English church, he discovered that he was fascinated by controversial religious thought of immature Protestantism (he was expelled from Oxford due to religious incompatibility ). During his visit to Ireland, Pain met with Quaker's sermon and eventually went to Quaker in 1667 and began attending regular meetings.