Beginnings in England Religious strife in the
Kingdom of England had existed for centuries, with
proto-Protestant groups (mainly the
Lollards) emerging before the
English Reformation brought radical ideas to the mainstream. During and after the
English Civil War (1642–1651) many
dissenting Christian groups emerged, including the
Seekers and others. A young man,
George Fox, was dissatisfied with the teachings of the
Church of England and
nonconformists. Whilst living in
Mansfield,
Nottinghamshire in 1647, he claimed to have received a revelation that "there is one, even Christ Jesus, who can speak to thy condition", and
Barbados preaching and teaching with the aim of converting new adherents to his faith. The central theme of his Gospel message was that Jesus Christ was alive and has come to teach his people himself. Quakers also described themselves using terms such as true Christianity, Saints, Children of the Light, and Friends of Truth, reflecting terms used in the New Testament by members of the early Christian church. , a prominent Quaker leader, being pilloried and whipped Quakerism gained a considerable following in England and Wales, not least among women. An address "To the Reader" by
Mary Forster accompanied a Petition to the
Parliament of England presented on 20 May 1659, expressing the opposition of over 7000 women to "the oppression of Tithes". The overall number of Quakers increased to a peak of 60,000 in England and Wales by 1680 (1.15% of the population of England and Wales). leading to official persecution in England and Wales under the
Quaker Act 1662 and the
Conventicle Act 1664. This persecution of dissenters was relaxed after the
Declaration of Indulgence (1687–1688) and stopped under the
Act of Toleration 1689. One modern view of Quakerism at this time was that the direct relationship with Christ was encouraged through spiritualisation of human relations, and "the redefinition of the Quakers as a holy tribe, 'the family and household of God. Together with
Margaret Fell, the wife of
Thomas Fell, who was the vice-chancellor of the
Duchy of Lancaster and an eminent judge, Fox developed new conceptions of family and community that emphasised "holy conversation": speech and behaviour that reflected piety, faith, and love. With the restructuring of the family and household came new roles for women; Fox and Fell viewed the Quaker mother as essential to developing "holy conversation" in her children and husband.
Migration to North America The persecution of Quakers in North America began in July 1656 when English Quaker missionaries
Mary Fisher and
Ann Austin began preaching in Boston. They were considered heretics because of their insistence on individual obedience to the
Inward light. They were imprisoned in harsh conditions for five weeks and banished by the
Massachusetts Bay Colony. Their books were burned, and most of their property confiscated.
Boston Common for repeatedly defying a
Puritan law banning Quakers from the colony. She was one of the four executed Quakers known as the
Boston martyrs. In 1661,
King Charles II forbade Massachusetts from executing anyone for professing Quakerism. In 1684, England
revoked the Massachusetts charter, sent over a royal governor to enforce English laws in 1686 and, in 1689, passed a broad Toleration Act. In 1665 Quakers established a meeting in
Shrewsbury, New Jersey (now Monmouth County), and built a meeting house in 1672 that was visited by George Fox in the same year. They were able to establish thriving communities in the
Delaware Valley, although they continued to experience persecution in some areas, such as
New England. The three colonies that tolerated Quakers at this time were
West Jersey,
Rhode Island, and
Pennsylvania, where Quakers established themselves politically. In Rhode Island, 36 governors in the first 100 years were Quakers. West Jersey and Pennsylvania were established by affluent Quaker
William Penn in 1676 and 1682 respectively, with Pennsylvania as an American commonwealth run under Quaker principles. William Penn signed a peace treaty with
Tamanend, leader of the
Lenape, and other treaties followed between Quakers and Native Americans. This peace endured almost a century, until the
Penn's Creek Massacre of 1755. Early colonial Quakers also established communities and meeting houses in North Carolina and Maryland, after fleeing persecution by the Anglican Church in Virginia. In a 2007 interview, author David Yount (
How the Quakers Invented America) said that Quakers first introduced many ideas from England that later became mainstream, such as democracy in the Pennsylvania legislature, the
Bill of Rights to the
U.S. Constitution from Rhode Island Quakers, trial by jury, equal rights for men and women, and public education. The
Liberty Bell was cast by Quakers in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Quietism Early Quakerism tolerated boisterous behaviour that challenged conventional etiquette; however, by 1700, its adherents no longer supported disruptive and unruly behaviour. During the 18th century, Quakers entered the
Quietist period in the history of their church, becoming more inward-looking spiritually and less active in converting others. Marrying outside the Society was cause for having one's membership revoked. Numbers dwindled, dropping to 19,800 in England and Wales by 1800 (0.21% of the population),
Splits Around the time of the
American Revolutionary War, some American Quakers split from the main Society of Friends over issues such as support for the war, forming groups such as the
Free Quakers and the
Universal Friends. Later, in the 19th century, there was a diversification of theological beliefs in the Religious Society of Friends, and this led to several larger splits within the movement.
Hicksite–Orthodox split The Hicksite–Orthodox split arose out of both ideological and socioeconomic tensions. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Hicksites tended to be agrarian and poorer than the more urban, wealthier, Orthodox Quakers. With increasing financial success, Orthodox Quakers wanted to "make the Society a more respectable body – to transform their sect into a church – by adopting mainstream Protestant orthodoxy". Hicksites, though they held a variety of views, generally saw the market economy as corrupting, and believed Orthodox Quakers had sacrificed their orthodox Christian spirituality for material success. Hicksites viewed the Bible as secondary to the individual cultivation of God's light within. With Gurneyite Quakers' shift toward Protestant principles and away from the spiritualisation of human relations, women's role as promoters of "holy conversation" started to decrease. Conversely, within the Hicksite movement the rejection of the market economy and the continuing focus on community and family bonds tended to encourage women to retain their role as powerful arbiters.
Elias Hicks's religious views were claimed to be
universalist and to contradict Quakers' historical orthodox Christian beliefs and practices. Hicks' Gospel preaching and teaching precipitated the
Great Separation of 1827, which resulted in a parallel system of Yearly Meetings in America, joined by Friends from Philadelphia, New York, Ohio, Indiana, and Baltimore. They were referred to by opponents as Hicksites and by others and sometimes themselves as Orthodox. Quakers in Britain recognised only the Orthodox Quakers and refused to correspond with the Hicksites.
Beaconite controversy Isaac Crewdson was a
Recorded Minister in
Manchester. His 1835 book
A Beacon to the Society of Friends insisted that the inner light was at odds with a religious belief in
salvation by the
atonement of Christ. This Christian controversy led to Crewdson's resignation from the Religious Society of Friends, along with 48 fellow members of Manchester Meeting and about 250 other British Quakers in 1836–1837. Some of these joined the
Plymouth Brethren.
Rise of Gurneyite Quakerism, and the Gurneyite–Conservative split Orthodox Friends became more
evangelical during the 19th century and were influenced by the
Second Great Awakening. This movement was led by British Quaker
Joseph John Gurney. Christian Friends held
Revival meetings in America and became involved in the
Holiness movement of churches. Quakers such as
Hannah Whitall Smith and
Robert Pearsall Smith became speakers in the religious movement and introduced Quaker phrases and practices to it. This statement of faith was agreed to by 95 of the representatives at a meeting of
Five Years Meeting Friends, but unexpectedly the Richmond Declaration was not adopted by London Yearly Meeting because a vocal minority, including
Edward Grubb, opposed it. Fifteen years after the signing on the Richmond Declaration, Five Years Meeting was established in 1902 by a collection of orthodox yearly meetings. In 1963 Five Years Meeting was renamed
Friends United Meeting.
Missions to Asia and Africa . Following the
Christian revivals in the mid-19th century, Friends in Great Britain sought also to start missionary activity overseas. The first missionaries were sent to
Benares (
Varanasi), in India, in 1866. The Friends Foreign Mission Association was formed in 1868 and sent missionaries to
Madhya Pradesh, India, forming what is now the Mid-India Yearly Meeting. Later it spread to
Madagascar from 1867, China from 1896,
Sri Lanka from 1896, and
Pemba Island from 1897. The Friends Syrian Mission was established in 1874, which among other institutions ran the
Ramallah Friends School in the West Bank, which still exist today and is affiliated with the
Friends United Meeting. The Swiss missionary
Theophilus Waldmeier founded
Brummana High School in
Lebanon in 1873. Evangelical Friends Churches from
Ohio Yearly Meeting sent missionaries to India in 1896, forming what is now
Bundelkhand Yearly Meeting. Cleveland Friends went to
Mombasa, Kenya, and started what became the most successful Friends' mission. Their Quakerism spread within
Kenya and to
Uganda,
Tanzania,
Burundi, and
Rwanda.
Theory of evolution The
theory of evolution as described in
Charles Darwin's
On the Origin of Species (1859) was opposed by many Quakers in the 19th century, particularly by older evangelical Quakers who dominated the Religious Society of Friends in Great Britain. These older Quakers were suspicious of Darwin's theory and believed that
natural selection could not explain life on its own. The influential Quaker scientist
Edward Newman said that the theory was "not compatible with our notions of creation as delivered from the hands of a Creator". However, some young Friends such as
John Wilhelm Rowntree and
Edward Grubb supported Darwin's theories, using the doctrine of progressive revelation. This made him one of the first teachers to do so in the Midwest. Acceptance of the theory of evolution became more widespread in Yearly Meetings who moved toward liberal Christianity in the 19th and 20th centuries. However,
creationism predominates within evangelical Friends Churches, particularly in East Africa and parts of the United States.
Quaker Renaissance In the late 19th century and early 20th century, the so-called Quaker Renaissance movement began within London Yearly Meeting. Young Friends in London Yearly Meeting at this time moved away from evangelicalism and towards liberal Christianity. This movement was particularly influenced by Rowntree, Grubb, and
Rufus Jones. Such Liberal Friends promoted the theory of evolution, modern
biblical criticism, and the social meaning of Christ's teaching – encouraging Friends to follow the New Testament example of Christ by performing good works. These men downplayed the evangelical Quaker belief in the
atonement of Christ on the Cross at
Calvary.
Conscientious objection (FAU), a volunteer service founded by British Quakers, with a FAU ambulance and driver pictured in Germany in 1945 Formal legislation to exempt
conscientious objectors from fighting was first granted in Great Britain in 1757 when Quakers were given exemption from military service, which was a milestone in
freedom of conscience. During
World War I and
World War II, Friends' opposition to war was put to the test. Many Friends became conscientious objectors and some in Britain formed the
Friends Ambulance Unit, aiming at "co-operating with others to build up a new world rather than fighting to destroy the old", as did the
American Friends Service Committee.
Birmingham in England had a strong Quaker community during the war. Many British Quakers were conscripted into the
Non-Combatant Corps during both world wars.
World Committee for Consultation After the two world wars had brought the different Quaker strands closer together, Friends from different yearly meetings – many having served together in the Friends Ambulance Unit or the American Friends Service Committee, or in other relief work – later held several Quaker World Conferences. This brought about a standing body of Friends: the
Friends World Committee for Consultation.
Evangelical Friends A growing desire for a more fundamentalist approach among some Friends after the First World War began a split among
Five Years Meetings. In 1924, the
Central Yearly Meeting of Friends was started by some Friends who left the Five Years Meeting. In 1926, Oregon Yearly Meeting seceded from the Five Years Meeting, bringing together several other yearly meetings and scattered monthly meetings. In 1947, the
Association of Evangelical Friends was formed, with triennial meetings until 1970. In 1965, this was replaced by the Evangelical Friends Alliance, which in 1989 became
Evangelical Friends Church International.
Role of women , built in 1870 in
Indiana, with an openable partition between male and female sections In the 1650s, individual Quaker women prophesied and preached publicly, developing charismatic personae and spreading the sect. This practice was bolstered by the movement's firm concept of spiritual equality for men and women. Moreover, Quakerism initially was propelled by the nonconformist behaviours of its followers, especially women who broke from social norms. By the 1660s, the movement had gained a more structured organisation, which led to separate women's meetings. Through the women's meetings, women oversaw domestic and community life, including marriage. They were involved in missionary work in various ways and places. Early Quaker women missionaries included Sarah Cheevers and Katharine Evans. Others active in proselytising included
Mary Penington,
Mary Mollineux and
Barbara Blaugdone. Quaker women published at least 220 texts during the 17th century. However, some Quakers resented the power of women in the community. In the early years of Quakerism, George Fox faced resistance in developing and establishing women's meetings. As controversy increased, Fox did not fully adhere to his agenda. For example, he established the London Six Weeks Meeting in 1671 as a regulatory body, led by 35 women and 49 men. Even so, conflict culminated in the Wilkinson–Story split, in which a portion of the Quaker community left to worship independently in protest at women's meetings. After several years, this schism became largely resolved, testifying to the resistance of some within the Quaker community and to the spiritual role of women that Fox and Margaret Fell had encouraged. Particularly within the relatively prosperous Quaker communities of the eastern United States, the focus on the child and "holy conversation" gave women unusual community power, although they were largely excluded from the market economy. With the Hicksite–Orthodox split of 1827–1828, Orthodox women found their spiritual role decreased, while Hicksite women retained greater influence. According to
Quakers In The World, "The Women's Suffrage Movement in the USA is widely considered to date from the First Women's Rights Convention, held in Seneca Falls, New York State in 1848. This meeting was instigated by five women who had been closely involved in the abolition of slavery, all but one of whom were Quakers."
Friends in business and education founded Cadbury in
Birmingham, England, in 1824, selling tea, coffee and drinking chocolate. Described as "natural capitalists" by the
BBC, many Quakers were successful in a variety of industries. Two notable examples were
Abraham Darby I and
Edward Pease. Darby and his family played an important role in the British
Industrial Revolution with their innovations in ironmaking. Pease, a
Darlington manufacturer, was the main promoter of the
Stockton and Darlington Railway, which was the world's first public railway to use steam locomotives.
Voltaire's
Letters on the English (1733) included the spirit of commerce and religious diversity in Great Britain, with the first four letters based on the Quakers. Quakers have a long history of establishing educational institutions. Initially, Quakers had no ordained
clergy, and therefore needed no
seminaries for theological training. In England, Quaker schools sprang up soon after the movement emerged, with
Friends School Saffron Walden being the most prominent. Quaker schools in the UK and Ireland are supported by The Friends' Schools' Council. In Australia,
Friends' School, Hobart, founded in 1887, has grown into the largest Quaker school in the world. In Britain and the United States, friends have established a variety of institutions at a variety of
educational levels. In Kenya, Quakers founded several primary and secondary schools in the first half of the 20th century before
the country's independence in 1963.
International development International volunteering organisations such as
Service Civil International and
International Voluntary Service were founded by leading Quakers.
Eric Baker, a prominent Quaker, was one of the founders of
Amnesty International and of the
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. The Quaker
Edith Pye established a national Famine Relief Committee in May 1942, encouraging a network of local famine relief committees, among the most energetic of which was the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief,
Oxfam.
Irving and
Dorothy Stowe co-founded
Greenpeace with many other environmental activists in 1971, shortly after becoming Quakers.
Friends and slavery Some Quakers in America and Britain became known for their involvement in the abolitionist movement. In the early history of
Colonial America, it was fairly common for Friends to own slaves,
e.g. in Pennsylvania. Following moves by Britain Yearly Meeting to pursue an agenda leading to reparations for Quaker involvement in slavery, Ann Morgan published in 2024 her study of the involvement of Lancaster Quakers in the enslavement economy. During the early to mid-1700s, disquiet about this practice arose among Friends, best exemplified by the testimonies of
Benjamin Lay,
Anthony Benezet and
John Woolman, and this resulted in an abolition movement among Friends. Nine of the twelve founding members of the
Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade, or The Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, were Quakers:
John Barton (1755–1789);
William Dillwyn (1743–1824); George Harrison (1747–1827);
Samuel Hoare Jr (1751–1825); Joseph Hooper (1732–1789); John Lloyd;
Joseph Woods Sr (1738–1812); James Phillips (1745–1799); and Richard Phillips. Five of the Quakers had been amongst the informal group of six Quakers who had pioneered the movement in 1783, when the first petition against the slave trade was presented to Parliament. As Quakers could not serve as Members of Parliament, they relied on the help of Anglican men who could, such as
William Wilberforce and his brother-in-law
James Stephen. By the beginning of the
American Revolutionary War, few Friends owned slaves. At the war's end in 1783, Yarnall family members along with fellow Meeting House Friends made a failed petition to the
Continental Congress to abolish
slavery in the United States. In 1790, the Society of Friends petitioned the
United States Congress to abolish slavery. One example of a reversal in sentiment about slavery took place in the life of
Moses Brown, one of four Rhode Island brothers who, in 1764, organized and funded the tragic and fateful voyage of the
slave ship Sally. Brown broke away from his three brothers, became an abolitionist, and converted to Christian Quakerism. During the 19th century, Quakers such as
Levi Coffin and
Isaac Hopper played a major role in helping enslaved people escape through the
Underground Railroad. Black Quaker
Paul Cuffe, a sea captain and businessman, was active in the abolitionist and
resettlement movement in the early part of that century. Quaker
Laura Smith Haviland, with her husband, established the first station on the Underground Railroad in Michigan. Later, Haviland befriended
Sojourner Truth, who called her the Superintendent of the Underground Railroad. However, in the 1830s, the abolitionist
Grimké sisters dissociated themselves from the Quakers "when they saw that Negro Quakers were segregated in separate pews in the Philadelphia meeting house". ==Theology==