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  1. John Penn
    Last governor of colonial Pennsylvania

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  1. Feb 18, 2020 · John Penn, signer of the Declaration of Independence Public domain image. John Penn was born on May 17, 1741 near Port Royal, Virginia. As the only child of Moses and Catherine Penn, John was the center of the world in his wealthy family. John studied for two years at a common school.

  2. President of board of trustees 1764-1771 and 1774-1779. John Penn was the older son of Richard Penn the elder and the grandson of Pennsylvania’s founder, William Penn. After his elders forced him to repudiate his youthful marriage to the daughter of James Cox of London, he was sent to study at the University of Geneva from 1747 until 1751.

  3. John Penn (14 July 1729 – 9 February 1795) was an English-born colonial administrator who served as the last governor of colonial Pennsylvania, serving in that office from 1763 to 1771 and from 1773 to 1776. Educated in Britain and Switzerland, he was also one of the Penn family proprietors of the Province of Pennsylvania from 1771 until 1776 ...

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  5. Occupation. lawyer. Known for. signer of the United States Declaration of Independence. Signature. John Penn (May 17, 1741 – September 14, 1788) was an American Founding Father who served multiple terms in the Continental Congress, and who signed both the Declaration of Independence and Articles of Confederation as a delegate of North Carolina .

  6. John Penn (1741-1788) Written By Adrienne Dunn. Patriot, Continental Congress member, and North Carolina signer of the Declaration of Independence, John Penn was a native of Caroline County, Virginia. Although he achieved only a limited formal education, Penn read many books from the library of Edmund Pendleton, a member of the Virginia House ...

  7. May 18, 2012 · John Penn (May 17, 1740 – September 14, 1788) was one of the few men who signed the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation. He served alongside fellow North Carolina Delegates William Hooper and Joseph Hewes in the Second Continental Congress. He died shortly before George Washington took office as the first President ...

  8. John Penn. Law Practice in Virginia, 1762; Accepted to the North Carolina Bar, 1774; Member of Continental Congress, 1775-77, 1779-80; Member of the Board of War, 1780. John Penn was born in Caroline County, Virginia, to a family of means. His father died when he was eighteen years old, and though he had received only a rudimentary education at ...

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