Eckhardt, Celia Morris. Fanny Wright. Harvard University Press.
171
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Occupation | Frances Wright | FW
delivered what was said to be the first public address by a woman on a public occasion before a large mixed audience Eckhardt, Celia Morris. Fanny Wright. Harvard University Press. 171 That is, the first public address... |
Occupation | May Drummond | She was called to the ministry around 1734, which, Thomas Story reported, caused renewed pain to her family. Story, Thomas. 714 |
Occupation | Joan Vokins | Not long after her conversion JV
became a Quaker minister and missionary. She and her sister Jane Sansom
became local leaders of the movement, strong supporters of the women's meetings which in the later 1670s... |
Occupation | Evelyn Sharp | At the end of her first day in BuzulukES
felt that a corpse lying face down in the snow was the happiest thing she had seen all day. John, Angela V. Evelyn Sharp: Rebel Woman, 18691955. Manchester University Press. 132 |
Occupation | Kathleen E. Innes | KEI
became Secretary of the Society of Friends
' influential Peace Committee
; she remained in this position, which paid the considerable sum of £300 per year, for ten years. Harvey, Kathryn. "Driven by War into Politics": A Feminist Biography of Kathleen Innes. University of Alberta. 93 Peace Committee Minutes, 6 May 1925. |
Occupation | Dorothy White | DW
worked for her faith as a minister and preacher for the Society of Friends
. |
Occupation | Mary Peisley | |
Occupation | Rebecca Travers | RT
's visible ministry in London belongs to the years 1659-61. Kunze, Bonnelyn Young. Margaret Fell and the Rise of Quakerism. Macmillan. 141 |
Occupation | Catherine Phillips | She duly took up the role of minister and missionary for the Society of Friends
. She was active in this calling over the course of her life, preaching in Britain, North America, and Holland... |
Occupation | Hester Biddle | |
Occupation | Margaret Fell | MF
was an important Quaker
preacher; yet her own preaching was probably eclipsed in importance by her publications and by her facilitation of the publishing of other Quakers. George Fox
's journal includes a defence... |
Occupation | Mary Fisher | |
politics | Hannah Kilham | During her interval of time in England in 1828-30, HK
spoke to meetings of Friends
about her anti-slavery concerns. Disregarding difference of faith, she quoted Hannah More
in these talks. Kilham, Hannah. Memoir of the late Hannah Killam. Editor Biller, Sarah, Harvey and Darton. 336-7 |
politics | Mary Fisher | |
politics | Hester Biddle | George Fox
later reported meeting HB
in the Strand in London in about 1657, at a time when Cromwell
was persecuting Quakers
. She told him of her plan to seek out the future Charles II |
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