The Olive Branch Petition is sent to …

Years: 1775 - 1775
July
The Olive Branch Petition is sent to London on July 8, 1775, in the care of Richard Penn and Arthur Lee.

Penn, the second son of Richard Penn, Sr. (1706–1771) and the grandson of William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, had been educated at Eton College and St John's College, Cambridge before joining the Inner Temple.

In 1763 he and his brother John had visited Pennsylvania, of which his family were still sole proprietors.

Qualified as a councilor on January 12, 1764, he had returned to Pennsylvania in 1771 and had been appointed lieutenant governor, soon becoming acting governor when his brother returned to England to attend to the colony's legal interests.

He had proved popular with the provincials, taking much care over their commercial interests, but less so with his uncle, the proprietor.

After two years he had been supplanted by the re-appointment of his brother as governor.
 
On May 21, 1772, at Christ Church, Philadelphia, he had married Mary "Polly" Masters, daughter of the late William Masters of Philadelphia.

The bride's mother had given them as a wedding present a splendid Philadelphia city house, where Penn entertains members of the Continental Congress, Virginia delegate Colonel George Washington, being among his guests.

Penn had been elected a trustee of the College and Academy of Philadelphia (now the University of Pennsylvania) in 1772, serving as president of the board in 1773 and 1774.

With the coming of the Revolution, he retires and returned to England in the summer of 1775, when the Continental Congress entrusts him with the Olive Branch Petition to the King.


Dickinson hopes that word of the bloodshed at Lexington and Concord combined with the "humble petition" will inspire the King to at least negotiate with the colonists.

However, the petition will be received too late to do any good.

George III will refuse to accept the petition, but Penn will give evidence to the House of Lords on the colonies' attitudes toward independence.

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