•
The Beginnings of Quakerism (1912) •
The Second Period of Quakerism (1919) In 1897
John Wilhelm Rowntree and
Rufus Jones set out in 1897 to write a "comprehensive history of Quakerism". After Rowntree had died in 1905, Jones invited Braithwaite to write the early history of the
Society of Friends. These two books form part of the seven-volume Rowntree History Series. Jones added to the series two volumes on
Later Periods of Quakerism. In 1955 Frederick James Smithen stated that
The Beginnings of Quakerism was "still regarded as the standard work on the rise and early fortunes of the Quaker movement". The series had the financial support of
Joseph Rowntree, and its books tend to support a liberal approach in Quakerism. Braithwaite's distinctions drawn between early Quakers and
Puritans have come in for criticism for some over-simplification. Braithwaite's other works included: •
Red Letter Days; a Verse Calendar (1907) •
Spiritual Guidance in the Experience of the Society of Friends (
Swarthmore Lecture 1909) •
The Message and Mission of Quakerism (1912) (with
Henry Theodore Hodgkin (1877-1933)) •
Foundations of National Greatness (1915) •
The penal laws affecting early Friends in England ==Family==