<span>The counties with two units had a majority of the votes, despite only making up one-third of the population.</span>
Quakers settled in Pennsylvania...founder of William Penn William Penn was the absolute proprietor of Pennsylvania (he held the royal charter) and had pronounced religious tolerance for all. Other colonies were often religiously linked and intolerant of religious views outside narrow limits.
He welcomed Catholics and Quakers among others. Because the Colony was established as a refuge for European Quakers. Pennsylvania was a favorable place to settle: climate, land, port and government. Philadelphia was at the time the best developed city in the continent.
Because the Colony was established as a refuge for European Quakers.
You see, William Penn was a friend of king Charles the second and the king did not want to kill William Penn for being a quaker. So he basicly gave him a grant to find land so he would escape persicution. Then have a place for religious freedom.
A and c i did it on edge and got it correct
You would most likely settle in Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania was established by William Penn (and was named after him) with the idea that it should be a haven ( a safe place) for the Quakers who were prosecuted elsewhere and they would feel safe in Pennsylvania.
Answer:
both address executive power, both identify the head executive of the branch
Explanation: