In 1700, voting in Pennsylvania was primarily limited to white male property owners. Specifically, men who possessed a certain amount of land or wealth were granted the right to vote, reflecting the colony's emphasis on property qualifications. Additionally, Quakers, who were influential in the colony's governance, played a significant role in shaping voting rights, although the electorate was still predominantly exclusive and excluded women, enslaved individuals, and non-property owners.
Men could vote in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
only men could vote in the colony.
I believe it was those who were member's of the church.
Puritans
if you had a house and where a white you could vote
the rich people who had gold and good farming
Pennsylvania
Only Puritan men could vote
I think one of them was Sir Walter Raleigh
The answer is no because women had no rights during that time.
So they could all be represented.
At first, only white men with land could vote.