colonial Pennsylvania was hard for kids they had to go to school come home and do chores when they did have time to play they would play games like leap frog marbles hopscotch blindman(like Marco polo) puzzles tobs Jacobs ladder dolls fox and geese checkers hull and gull
Life in Pennsylvania was very plain when William Penn was around. More people were out working in gardens and shops than what are today.
In 1775 there was no State of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania was still a British colony. Pennsylvania was largly a colony of farming communities with a significant, and largely unsettled, western frontier. It also had Philadelphia, the largest city in the English North Ameican colonies and a major trading port.
The civic life of Pennsylvania was the food and supplies that they had there. -McCainiac
they had a hard life.
The Pennsylvania colony no longer exists. Pennsylvania is now a state in America
Hello, it means the rest the the persons life. That is why it is called a "life" sentence.
it was hard
1992
There is no such thing as "The Pennsylvania Health Insurance" and therefore it does not have a founding date. A better question would have been "Where can one get life insurance in Pennsylvania?"
it doesn't
The weather may vary depending where in Pennsylvania you are.
In Pennsylvania, a person serving a LIFE sentence is not eligible for parole. The only way a lifer can be released from prison in PA is to (1) have his conviction overturned; (2) receive a commutation of his sentence from the Governor of Pennsylvania; or (3) die in prison. It should be noted that obtaining a commutation of a life sentence in PA is very difficult. The Governor of Pennsylvania can only grant a commutation of a life sentence after the inmate's petition for a commutation has met with the unanimous approval of the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons. There are 5 members that serve on the PA Board of Pardons. If even one member votes against a lifer's commutation petition, the Governor cannot legally grant that commutation.