William Penn was a Quaker, author of the Great Law, and a man of peace,
although while he lived in England he was incarcerated on more than one
occasion (even in the Tower of London) for various periods of time for civil
disobedience for advocating for religious freedom and practice and because he
promoted the Quaker religion in defiance of the English Crown.
He was also know to be very kind and fair with the Native American Tribes,
paying the full value for land he would purchase from them. He also learned
their languages so he could communicate with them using their language and did
not expect then to learn English.
OK, that is it for your Introduction to Corrections mini-class.
Stay well everyone, Phase is just around the corner.
Chuck
Charles J. Kehoe, ACSW, CCE
Chief Operating Officer
Kehoe Correctional Consulting, LLC
P.O. Box 1265
Midlothian, VA 23113
(804) 873-4949
Web site: www.charlesjkehoe.com<http://www.charlesjkehoe.com>
________________________________
From: rc3r-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <rc3r-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of
pcondro@xxxxxxxxx <pcondro@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2020 6:35 PM
To: rc3r@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <rc3r@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [rc3r] Re: image.jpg
I loved it......but having lived or spent time in Philly from 81-85 and with
my kids living there at times.......that is William Penn and not Ben
Franklin.......but I won’t tell.....the sentiment is correct.
Peter
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 24, 2020, at 10:23 AM, Jerry P Carr (Redacted sender jpcarr126 for
DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
<image.jpg>
Sent from my iPhone