Today is German-American Day, in recognition that on this date in 1683, William Penn brought the first German settlers to America—a group of 13 German Quaker and Mennonite families who founded Germantown. As Garrison Keillor notes in The Writer’s Almanac:
Penn the son called Pennsylvania his “Holy Experiment,” and he set about to find a group of righteous men to form a new society founded on Quaker ideals of nonviolence, freedom of religious worship, and equality for all. “Freedom of religion” and “equality” were conditional terms, however. While other religious traditions were tolerated in Pennsylvania, participation in government was restricted to Protestants; Catholics, Jews, and Muslims could not vote or hold office. And Penn’s promises of equality didn’t really extend to everyone: women couldn’t vote, and Penn himself was a slave-owner.
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