The place was not sexist, had religious freedom, and had brotherly love.
No, Pennsylvania had very good relations with Native Americans.
Quakers first major colony was Pennsylvania, Quakers did settle in this place but not too long. Next colonies were West Jersey and North Carolina they settle for some time in North Carolina but a war arises between French and Quakers and the Quakers lost that battle.
Quakers believed that specific people were good unlike puritans. -teenager
As early as 1647, settlement occurred on what is now Pennsylvania soil by Swedish, Dutch and English settlers in the Delaware River region. In 1681 however, Pennsylvania's colonial status was sealed when approximately the present state of Pennsylvania was granted to William Penn, a member of the Society of Friends (Quakers), to offset a debt owed to Penn's father. In 1682 the city plan for Philadelphia was laid out. In 1682 the "Frame of Government" for Pennsylvania was put into effect. In 1683 the first German settlers arrived in Pennsylvania and formed Germantown near Philadelphia. One of the Middle Colonies, Pennsylvania was a Proprietary colony In 1763, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, two young British astronomers commissioned to establish a borderline between Maryland and Pennsylvania, worked for more than four years to settle a century-old boundary dispute between the Calverts of Maryland and the Penns of Pennsylvania by establishing the Mason-Dixon Line.
Segregation refers to the physical separation of groups based on characteristics such as race or ethnicity, leading to unequal treatment and opportunities. Prejudice, on the other hand, is a mindset of holding negative beliefs or attitudes towards individuals based on their membership in a particular group, which can inform discriminatory actions. While prejudice can fuel segregation, segregation can also reinforce prejudice through the perpetuation of stereotypes and unequal power dynamics.
Separation. "There is a separation between the houses."
Some of them were coming over to find religious freedom, like the Quakers, while others sought economic opportunities in the New World.
Well, if you mean the start within the beliefs then the answer is in the beginning of time, if you mean the separation between Judaism and Christianity then the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem and the belief of him being the Messiah, if you mean the beginning of the followers this would be in Israel.
The Quakers were pacifists and actually had a very good relationship with the natives in their area.
A separation between a couple is a breakup, or informally "dump". A married couple gets a divorce.
nothing
the Quakers would provide transportation for the slave to ride in until they got to cannada