For many outside observers during the first hundred years of Quakerism, the most surprising aspect of Quakerism was that "ministry" – the prerogative to speak during a Quaker
meeting – was open to women from the very beginnings of the movement in the 1650s. One of the earliest to formulate direct biblical justification for this was
Sarah Blackborow.
Margaret Fell, one of the
Valiant Sixty and referred to as the "Mother of Quakerism", argued in favor of women preachers in her work
Womens Speaking Justified. Her work on the subject is considered to have been among the most comprehensive at the time. In
James Boswell's
Life of Johnson,
Samuel Johnson's opinion of a female Quaker preacher was recorded thus: "Sir, a woman's preaching is like a dog walking on his hind legs. It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all." Especially in the early years, a large number – even possibly the majority – of traveling Quaker preachers were women. Out of 141 traveling Quaker ministers from America to England between 1685 and 1835, 34% were women. While some radical
Puritan sects allowed women to preach, the conception of
gender equality in Quakerism was unparalleled by other groups at the time. Aside from ministry, Quaker women traveled alone and published their writing, which was also unusual for the time. Several of the Valiant Sixty were women. For many Quakers, both historical and contemporary, the inclusion of women is part of what is now called the "
Testimony of Equality". However, despite that testimony, women's roles were not completely equal for many years. Concerning the introduction and much later dissolution of separate meetings, one historian writes, :"On balance, and in the long run, I believe that the separate women's meeting was good for women; indeed, it may be said to have been a cradle not only of modern feminism but of the movements of abolitionism, women's suffrage, and peace activism, all of which were, and are, enlivened by the presence (even predominance) of Quaker female leaders." == In the United States ==