The Philadelphia Society of Friends battled to rid itself of the infection of slavery for nearly a century, finally forbidding slaveholding with the minutes of 1776. The road to redemption was not easy, as meeting members first struggled to realize the contradiction between their lifestyles and religion, then to stand up in singularity to present their newfound truth, and finally to address it on a large scale in order to convince their brothers of its sinfulness. The Society of Friends is often seen as a group of forward-thinking reformers, and while their actions came before many other abolitionist groups, their materializing consciousness was anything but unified
This paper discusses how and why the Quakers dealt with human rights issues in the United States bef...
On February 16, 1688, in response to fellow Quaker families in the area of Germantown, Pennsylvania,...
The history of Quaker ambivalence towards things intellectual, as it transpassed in Philadelphia, im...
Long before the Quaker anti-slavery societies of antebellum America worked to abolish slavery, the R...
The Religious Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers, are well known for their antislavery ph...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1949The purpose of this paper is to outline the development...
person of African descent, whether emancipated or free, has no right which a white man is bound to r...
This dissertation re-contextualizes the Quakers’ history as anti-slavery pioneers by exploring the c...
Philadelphia\u27s Quakers were at the forefront of an unprecedented movement for humanitarian reform...
The earliest records of Britain’s involvement in the slave trade date back to as early as 1562, howe...
At a meeting of Friends for New England, held on Rhode Island, in the sixth month, 1853. Endorsed by...
Niniejsza praca ma na celu potwierdzenie, iż Pennsylvania Abolition Society jest jedną z najważniejs...
Quaker protests against slavery started as early as 1682, in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and continued...
This paper discusses how and why the Quakers dealt with human rights issues in the United States bef...
This paper discusses how and why the Quakers dealt with human rights issues in the United States bef...
On February 16, 1688, in response to fellow Quaker families in the area of Germantown, Pennsylvania,...
The history of Quaker ambivalence towards things intellectual, as it transpassed in Philadelphia, im...
Long before the Quaker anti-slavery societies of antebellum America worked to abolish slavery, the R...
The Religious Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers, are well known for their antislavery ph...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Washington, 1949The purpose of this paper is to outline the development...
person of African descent, whether emancipated or free, has no right which a white man is bound to r...
This dissertation re-contextualizes the Quakers’ history as anti-slavery pioneers by exploring the c...
Philadelphia\u27s Quakers were at the forefront of an unprecedented movement for humanitarian reform...
The earliest records of Britain’s involvement in the slave trade date back to as early as 1562, howe...
At a meeting of Friends for New England, held on Rhode Island, in the sixth month, 1853. Endorsed by...
Niniejsza praca ma na celu potwierdzenie, iż Pennsylvania Abolition Society jest jedną z najważniejs...
Quaker protests against slavery started as early as 1682, in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and continued...
This paper discusses how and why the Quakers dealt with human rights issues in the United States bef...
This paper discusses how and why the Quakers dealt with human rights issues in the United States bef...
On February 16, 1688, in response to fellow Quaker families in the area of Germantown, Pennsylvania,...
The history of Quaker ambivalence towards things intellectual, as it transpassed in Philadelphia, im...