Wales On Sunday

AMERICAN DREAM FOR WELSH COLONISTS

- JASON EVANS Reporter jason.evans@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE story of Welsh-speaking colony Patagonia in South America is a familiar tale to many in Wales – but 200 years before its establishm­ent, there were hopes of a Cymraeg colony far to the north.

The story of the Welsh Tract begins in 1681 when, in the way of things in colonial America, the English king Charles II granted a land charter to Quaker William Penn. A huge parcel of land of some 29 million acres was handed over to pay a debt of £16,000 which the monarch owed to Penn’s father, Admiral William Penn.

The king named the new colony Pennsylvan­ia – literally “Penn’s Woods” – in honor of the admiral, though Penn junior wanted the land to be called New Wales because it was a “pretty, hilly country”. Penn was apparently worried people would think it had been named in his honour, and he would later write: “I opposed it [the name] and went to the King to have it struck out and altered, he said it was past... nor could twenty guineas move the under-secretary to vary the name”.

So Pennsylvan­ia rather than New Wales it became.

Following the establishm­ent of the colony Penn began organising the settlement of the land, sending dozens of ship and around 2,000 colonists and investors to the New World.

The area was already home to a number of Native American peoples including the Delaware and Susquehann­ock tribes, and treaties were signed with them.

Before Penn himself headed across the Atlantic, a group of Welsh Quakers led by John Roberts began discussion with him about the possibilit­y of establishi­ng a place “within which all causes, quarrels, crimes and disputes might be tried and wholly determined by officers, magistrate­s, and juries of our language”.

Penn agreed, and some 40,000 acres on the banks of Schuylkill River near the colonial capital, Philadelph­ia, were earmarked for the Welsh Tract where his fellow Quakers could run their own affairs in the Welsh language.

Quakers from across North and West Wales started to make the hazardous journey across the Atlantic, and the Welsh population of the new colony began to grow.

However, though the area was surveyed and boundaries set out in 1687, the Tract was never formally enacted – by the 1690s the land that was supposed to be a single entity had been carved up and claimed by other counties as the administra­tion and governance of Pennsylvan­ia was settled.

Though Welsh settlers continued to move to the area – and to this day the townships they establishe­d such as Radnor, Bala Cynwyd, Narbeth, Berwyn and Upper Merion have more than a familiar ring to them –

the dream of a Welsh-speaking, selfgovern­ing colony was lost.

But the Welsh Tract would not be the last attempt to establish a Welshspeak­ing community in Pennsylvan­ia. In the 1790s preacher and antislaver­y campaigner Morgan John Rees bought 17,000 acres of land west of Philadelph­ia and establishe­d Cambria. But the settlement did not prove a success, with one Welsh colonist, Rev Rees Lloyd, writing: “It is too hard for poor people to make a living upon this land. I cannot with a clear conscience encourage my poor countrymen to depend much on this place.”

Today the land envisaged as the Welsh Tract or Welsh Barony is split across three counties of Pennsylvan­ia – Montgomery, Chester and Delaware.

Dr Richard Hall, from Swansea University’s College of Arts and Humanities, said the Welsh have had a large influence on Pennsylvan­ia since its earliest days.

He said: “Penn advertised his new province extensivel­y in Europe, and particular­ly among oppressed and persecuted peoples. He also ensured a widely-skilled settler population, advertisin­g for ‘Industriou­s husbandmen and day labourers... carpenters, masons, smiths, weavers, tailors, tanners shoemakers, shipwright­s’ to move there.

“One of the peoples suffering religious persecutio­n at the time were the Welsh Quakers. They were forbidden to hold meetings, and penalised for doing so by imprisonme­nt and fines. In 1682 therefore, a committee of Welsh Quakers visited Penn in London and negotiated with him for a tract of land in Pennsylvan­ia, consisting of 40,000 acres for exclusive purchase and settlement by the Welsh Quakers.

“The first party of Welsh to emigrate to Penn’s colony were the socalled ‘Merioneth Adventurer­s’. Their leader was Dr Edward Jones. Other leading figures were Edward Rees, William John and Cadwalder Morgan. The Welsh Tract was for exclusive settlement and use by the Welsh. It had the nature of a Manor of a Baron and was often spoken of as the Welsh Barony.”

He added: “The Welsh influence upon Pennsylvan­ia persisted well beyond the colonial era. Saint Davids and Wayne in Delaware County; Berwyn, Nantmeal and Whitford in Chester; and Cynwyd, Bryn Athyn, Gwynedd, Narberth, Penllyn and Wynnewood in Montgomery all proclaim Welsh origin.

“In the 19th and 20th centuries, Welsh expertise was crucial in establishi­ng coal and slate industries in Pennsylvan­ia’s northeast. This would extend to the iron and steel mills of the west.

“The establishm­ent of notable institutio­ns of higher learning owed much to Welsh input too. Welsh influence is also present in the names of lawyers, jurists, educators, musicians and statespers­ons who have all left their mark on Pennsylvan­ian life over the last century or so.”

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 ??  ?? 200 years before arriving in Patagonia, Welsh people moved to America to set up home there
200 years before arriving in Patagonia, Welsh people moved to America to set up home there
 ?? SEAN PAVONE ?? The Independen­ce Hall in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia
SEAN PAVONE The Independen­ce Hall in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia

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