Making sure I have correct or not

Considering this reading and other readings from your text, which of the following made Pennsylvania, under William Penn, different from other colonies?

A.Religious freedom was encouraged in Pennsylvania.***MY ANSWER
B. Colonists generally treated Native Americans with respect.
C. There was frequent conflict with Native Americans.
D. Some colonists were persecuted for their religious beliefs

This other side the page this not the another test (QUESTION) letting y`all know
Penn thought of his colony as a “holy experiment.” He wanted it to be a model of religious freedom, peace, and Christian living. Protestants, Catholics, and Jews went to Pennsylvania to escape persecution. Later, English officials forced Penn to turn away Catholic and Jewish settlers.

Penn’s Quaker beliefs led him to speak out for fair treatment of Native Americans. Penn believed that the land in North America belonged to the Indians.

He insisted that settlers should pay for the land. Native Americans respected him for this policy. As a result, Pennsylvania colonists enjoyed many years of peace with their Indian neighbors. One settler remarked, “as Penn treated the Indians with extraordinary humanity, they became civil and loving to us.”

Thank you Ms.Sue and CellLover727 :)

That is a smart answer, but I think there may be a better one, judging by the text. (Also, I'm from PA! :D) P.S. I don't know if I'm right!!! I am just making an educated guess. Hope this helped!

Roise -- I agree with your answer.

You are welcome.

You are correct! The correct answer is A. Religious freedom was encouraged in Pennsylvania.

From the reading and other readings, we can see that William Penn made Pennsylvania different from other colonies by encouraging religious freedom. He wanted Pennsylvania to be a model of religious freedom, peace, and Christian living. People of different religious backgrounds, including Protestants, Catholics, and Jews, went to Pennsylvania to escape persecution.

Additionally, Penn's Quaker beliefs led him to speak out for fair treatment of Native Americans. He believed that the land in North America belonged to the Indians and insisted that settlers should pay for the land. This policy earned the respect of Native Americans, resulting in many years of peace between the Pennsylvania colonists and their Indian neighbors.

While B, C, and D are also mentioned in the reading, they do not differentiate Pennsylvania under William Penn from other colonies as much as the encouragement of religious freedom does.