Today, List of Quakers is a topic that has gained unprecedented relevance in today's society. Since its emergence, it has aroused widespread interest and has generated a series of debates and reflections in various areas. List of Quakers has impacted people's lives significantly, influencing their decisions, behaviors and perceptions. In this article, we will explore in depth the impact of List of Quakers on society today, as well as the implications it has for the future. We will analyze different perspectives and opinions about List of Quakers , with the aim of offering a comprehensive and objective vision of this topic that is so relevant today.
This is a list of notable people associated with the Religious Society of Friends , also known as Quakers, who have a Wikipedia article. The first part consists of individuals known to be or to have been Quakers continually from some point in their lives. The second part consists of individuals whose parents were Quakers or who were Quakers themselves at one time in their lives, but then converted to another religion, or who formally or informally distanced themselves from the Society of Friends, or who were disowned by their Friends Meeting.
Quakers
A
Elisabeth Abegg (1882–1974), German educator who rescued Jews during the Holocaust
Damon Albarn (b. 1968), English musician, singer-songwriter and record producer
Harry Albright (living), Swiss-born Canadian former editor of The Friend , Communications Consultant for FWCC
Thomas Aldham (c. 1616–1660), English Quaker instrumental in setting up the first meeting in the Doncaster area
Horace Alexander (1889–1989), English writer on India and friend of Gandhi
Darina Allen (b. 1948), cooking writer, educator and television chef
Diane Allen (b. 1948), American politician and journalist
Myrtle Allen (1924–2018), cook, "Matriarch of Irish cuisine"
William Allen (1770–1843), English scientist, philanthropist, and abolitionist
Edgar Anderson (1897–1969), American botanist
Charlotte Anley (1796–1893), English novelist and writer
Elizabeth Ashbridge (1713–1755), English Quaker preacher and memoirist
Alison Ashby (1901–1987), Australian botanical artist and plant collector.
Edwin Ashby (1861–1941), Australian property developer, malacologist, and ornithologist
Ann Austin (17th century), early English Quaker missionary
Iwao Ayusawa (鮎沢巌, 1894–1972), Japanese diplomat
B
Edmund Backhouse (1824–1906), English banker and MP of Parliament for Darlington
James Backhouse (1794–1869), UK-born Australian botanist and missionary
Edmund Bacon (1910–2005), American architect
Ernest Bader (1890–1982), Swiss-born English businessman and philanthropist
Joan Baez (b. 1941), American folk singer and peace campaigner
Eric Baker (1920–1976), English co-founder of Amnesty International and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
Emily Greene Balch (1867–1961), American Nobel Peace Prize winner
Caroline Balderston Parry (1945 – Feb 11, 2022), Canadian writer, musician, performer, celebrator, and consultant
Chris Barber (1921–2012), English businessman and chairman of Oxfam
Robert Barclay (1648–1690), Scottish theologian
John Henry Barlow (1855–1924), English Quaker statesman
Geoffrey Barraclough (1908–1984), English historian
Florence Mary Barrow (1876–1964), aid worker and housing reform activist
Bernard Barton (1784–1849), English poet
John Barton (1755–1789), English abolitionist
John Bartram (1699–1777), American botanist
William Bates (d. 1700), a founder of Newton Colony, the third English colony in West Jersey
Elizabeth Bathurst (1655–1685), English theologian and preacher
Helen Bayes (b. 1944), UK-born Australian child rights activist
Joel Bean (1825–1914), American Quaker minister
Anthony Benezet (1713–1784), American educator, abolitionist
Caleb P. Bennett (1758–1836), American soldier and politician
Douglas C. Bennett (b. 1946), American academic, president of Earlham College
Lewis Benson (1906–1986), American printer, expert in Early Quakerism, especially George Fox
Anna McClean Bidder (1903–2001), English marine zoologist and founder of Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge
Hester Biddle (c. 1629–1697), English pamphleteer and preacher
Albert Bigelow (1906–1993), American nuclear weapons protester
J. Brent Bill (b. 1951), American recorded minister and writer on religion[additional citation(s) needed ]
Linda Bilmes (b. 1960), co-author of The Three Trillion Dollar War , professor at Harvard Kennedy School ; co-chair Economists for Peace and Security .
George Birkbeck (1776–1841), one of the English founders of London Mechanics Institute, now Birkbeck, University of London
Sarah Blackborow (fl. 1650s – 1660s), English tractarian prominent in discussion of the role of women in the Society and of social issues
Barbara Blaugdone (c. 1609–1705), English autobiographer and minister
Sir Richard Body (1927–2018), Conservative MP from 1955 to 1959 and from 1966 to 2001, prominent Eurosceptic , and writer on agricultural matters
Taylor A. Borradaile (1885–1977), chemist and one of the four founders and first President of the Phi Kappa Tau fraternity; two of the founding principles of Phi Kappa Tau are also two of the Quaker testimonies : Integrity and Equality
Elise Boulding (1920–2010), Norwegian-born American educator, sociologist, prominent in the 20th-century peace research movement
Kenneth E. Boulding (1910–1993), English economist, educator, poet, and interdisciplinary philosopher
Bathsheba Bowers (1671–1718), American religious author and preacher
Samuel Bownas (1676–1753), English travelling minister and writer
John Bowne (1627–1695), English-born promoter of religious freedom in colonial America
Sandra Boynton (b. 1953), American writer, cartoonist and composer
Bertha Bracey (1893–1989), English teacher and aid worker
George Bradshaw (1801–1853), English cartographer, printer, publisher and originator of the railway guide
John Bright (1811–1889), English politician
Charlie Brooker (b. 1971), English satirist and broadcaster
Edmund Wright Brooks (1834–1928), English philanthropist and cement maker
Elizabeth Brown (1830–1899), English astronomer and meteorologist
Moses Brown (1738–1836), American industrialist and philanthropist
Jocelyn Bell Burnell (b. 1943), Northern Irish astrophysicist
Edward Burrough (1634–1663), English member of the Valiant Sixty
Smedley D. Butler (1881–1940), Major General in the United States Marine Corps and author of War is a Racket
Thomas S. Butler (1855–1928), American congressman
Charles Roden Buxton (1875–1942), British Member of Parliament
C
George Cadbury (1839–1922), English chocolatier
Henry Cadbury (1883–1974), American writer and chairman of the American Friends Service Committee
John Cadbury (1801–1889), English chocolatier
Richard Tapper Cadbury (1768–1860), English draper, abolitionist , philanthropist
Ruth Cadbury (b. 1959), British Member of Parliament
David Cadman (b. 1941), English economist and writer
Mary Greig Campbell (1907–1989), New Zealand librarian and China relief worker
Arthur Capper (1865–1951), governor and American senator from Kansas
Mary Birkett Card , (1774–1817), abolitionist and feminist poet
Thomas Carpenter (1752–1847), fighting Quaker who served in the Revolutionary War and afterward as a glassmaker
Pierre Cérésole (1879–1945), Swiss founder of Service Civil International
Whittaker Chambers (1901–1961), American ex-communist, ex-Soviet spy who converted to Quakerism
Sarah Cheevers (1608–1664), evangelist
Henry Christy (1810–1865), English banker, philanthropist and anthropologist
Cyrus Clark (fl. 1825–1863), English co-founder of C&J Clark , shoe manufacturers in Street, Somerset
William Coddington (1601–1678), first governor of Rhode Island
Levi Coffin (1798–1877), American abolitionist
Elizabeth Coggeshall (1770–1851), American minister who visited meetings throughout the United States, the British Isles, and European continent.
John S. Collins (1837–1928), American land developer
Peter Collinson FRS (1694–1768), English botanist
John Conard (1773–1857), American politician nicknamed the "Fighting Quaker", buried in an Episcopal Church graveyard
Anne Finch Conway (1631–1679), English philosopher
William Cooper (1754–1809), founder of Cooperstown, New York and father of author James Fenimore Cooper
James A. Corbett (1933–2001), American human-rights campaigner
Pit Corder (1918–1990), English applied linguist
Isaac Crewdson (1780–1844), English Quaker minister and founder of the Evangelical Friends or Beaconites
Stephen Crisp (1628–1692), English writer and recorded Quaker minister, also in the Low Countries
Joseph Crosfield (1792–1844), English industrialist
James Cudworth (1817–1899), steam locomotive designer
Adam Curle (1916–2006), first professor of peace studies at the University of Bradford
D
John Dalton (1766–1844), English chemist
Abraham Darby I (1678–1717), English ironmaster
Abraham Darby II (1711–1763), English ironmaster
Abraham Darby III (1750–1791), English ironmaster
James Dean (1931–1955), American actor
Judi Dench (b. 1934), English actress
Philip Dennis , agriculture missionary to the Miami Nation
Caleb Deschanel (b. 1944), American cinematographer
William Dewsbury (1671–1688), English Quaker minister
Jonathan Dickinson (1663–1722), Jamaican-born colonial American merchant and politician
Richard Dillingham (1823–1850), American abolitionist
Ambrose Dixon (1619–1687), colonial American
Dorcas Dole (fl. later 17th century), English pamphleteer and sectary
Stephen Donaldson (1946–1996), English prison and LGBT activist
Edward Doubleday (1811–1849), English entomologist and ornithologist
Henry Doubleday (1808–1875), English entomologist and ornithologist
Henry Doubleday (1810–1902), English scientist and horticulturalist
Sue Doughty (b. 1948), English politician
Paul Douglas (1892–1976), economist and US senator
Margaret Drabble (b. 1939), English novelist
Muriel Duckworth (1908–2009), Canadian peace campaigner
Cuthbert Dukes (1890–1977), English physician and pathologist
Robert Dunkin (1761–1831), English businessman and patron of science
Mary Dyer (c. 1611–1660), colonial American religious martyr
E
Solomon Eccles (1618–1683), initially an English composer, later a Quaker preacher
Arthur Stanley Eddington (1882–1944), UK astrophysicist
Paul Eddington (1927–1995), English actor
George Edmondson (1798–1863), English educator
Fritz Eichenberg (1901–1990), German illustrator
George Ellis (b. 1939), American Templeton Prize winning cosmologist
Rowland Ellis (1650–1731), Welsh Quaker leader
Thomas Ellwood (1639–1713), English religious writer
Joshua Evans (1731–1798), minister, journalist, and abolitionist from Haddonfield, New Jersey
Katherine Evans (1618–1692), English evangelist
F
Chuck Fager (b. 1942), American civil rights campaigner
Marjorie Farquharson (1953–2016), Scottish political scientist and human rights worker with Amnesty International
Jane Fearon (1654 or 1656–1737), Northern English pamphleteer who refuted predestination
Margaret Fell (1614–1702), "Mother of Quakerism," one of the Valiant Sixty , owner of Swarthmoor Hall , later married to George Fox
John Fenwick (1618–1683), English founder of Fenwick's Colony, the first English settlement in West Jersey
James Finlayson (c. 1772 – c. 1852), Scottish engineer prominent in Finland
Mary Fisher (1623–1698), English Quaker preacher
Isabella Ford (1855–1924), English feminist and socialist
Mary Forster (c. 1620–1687), English polemicist
Edwin B. Forsythe (1916–1984), representative for New Jersey
Richard J. Foster , American ecumenical leader and reformer, founder of Renovaré
John Fothergill (1712–1780), English Quaker physician, preacher and philanthropist
Caroline Fox (1819–1871), English diarist
George Fox (1624–1691), founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers)
Robert Were Fox I (1754–1818), English businessman
Robert Were Fox II (1789–1877), English geologist
Samuel Fox (1781–1868), English philanthropist and grocer
Tom Fox (1951–2006), humanitarian worker with Christian Peacemaking teams, held captive and killed in Iraq [citation needed ]
Esther G. Frame (1840–1920), American Quaker minister and evangelist
Ursula Franklin (1921–2016), German-born Canadian metallurgist and research physicist
Francis Frith (1822–1898), English photographer
Christopher Fry (1907–2005), English playwright
Elizabeth Fry (1780–1845), English prison reformer
Joan Mary Fry (1862–1955), English relief worker and social reformer
Joseph Fry (1777–1861), English tea dealer and an unsuccessful banker
Margery Fry (1874–1958), English penal reformer and college principal
Jonathan Fryer (1950–2021), British writer, broadcaster, lecturer and Liberal Democrat politician
G
Thomas Garrett (1789–1871), American abolitionist
Charles Gilpin (1815–1874), member of UK Parliament
Rickman Godlee (1849–1925), English surgeon and biographer
George Graham (1673–1751), English clockmaker , inventor , and member of the Royal Society
Hetty Green (1834–1916), businesswoman and financier known as "the richest woman in America" during the Gilded Age, nicknamed the Witch of Wall Street
Marion Greeves (1894–1979), one of the first two female members of the Senate of Northern Ireland
Israel Gregg (1775–1847), first captain of the steamboat Enterprise
Stephen Grellet (1773–1855), French-born American missionary
Philip Gross (b. 1952), English poet, novelist and playwright
Edward Grubb (1854–1939), English religious writer
Isabel Grubb (1881–1972), Irish historian
Paul Grundy (living), founding President of Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative and IBM 's Global Director of Healthcare Transformation
Joseph John Gurney (1788–1847), English banker, evangelical and abolitionist
H
Elizabeth Haddon (1680–1762), English-born founder of Haddonfield, New Jersey
Denis Halliday (1941–), former Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations and anti-war activist
Sheila Hancock (b. 1933), English comedian/actress
Edmund Happold (1930–1996), English engineer
Jan de Hartog (1914–2002), Dutch-born American playwright, novelist, and social critic
David Hartsough (b. 1940), American peace activist
Laura Smith Haviland (1808–1898), American abolitionist and social reformer
Alice Hayes (1657–1720), English Quaker preacher and autobiographer
Wilson A. Head (b. 1914), American/Canadian sociologist and human rights activist
Phoebe Hesketh (1909–2005), British nature poet and author.
John Hickenlooper (b. 1952), American politician
Edward Hicks (1780–1849), American painter and recorded Quaker minister
Elias Hicks (1748–1830), American Quaker minister, originator of the Hicksite Quaker schism of 1827
Declan Hill (living), Canadian journalist
Gordon Hirabayashi (1918–2012), American sociologist who defied World War II internment orders; moved to Canada to teach in 1959 and remained there until his death
Charles Elmer Hires (1851–1937), early promoter of commercially prepared root beer
Samuel Hoare Jr (1751–1825), English banker and abolitionist
Henry Hodgkin (1877–1933), English missionary and pacifist
John Hodgkin (1766–1845), English grammarian and calligrapher
John Hodgkin (1800–1875), English barrister and Quaker preacher
Thomas Hodgkin (1798–1866), English physician, identifier of Hodgkin's lymphoma
Thomas Hodgkin (1831–1913), English historian
Gerard Hoffnung (1925–1959), English cartoonist, musician and humorist
Christopher Holder (c. 1631 – post–1676), English-born American Quaker evangelist
David P. Holloway (1809–1883), American representative from Indiana
Rush D. Holt, Jr. (b. 1948), American congressman
Elizabeth Hooton (1600–1672), pioneer English preacher
Herbert Hoover (1874–1964), American president
Johns Hopkins (1795–1873), American philanthropist
Caroline Hopwood , Leeds based autographer published 1801
Samuel Howell (1723–1807), Philadelphia merchant and supporter of American independence
Francis Howgill , English preacher and writer
Mary Howitt (1799–1888), English poet, children's writer and translator
William Howitt (1792–1879), English writer and poet
Charles Humphreys (1714–1786), Continental Congressman
John Hunn (1849–1926), governor of Delaware
Esther Hunt (1751–1820), leader in her Quaker faith on America's frontier
John Hunt (1712–1778), English-born minister, one of the "Virginia Exiles"
John Hunt (1740–1824), minister and journalist from Moorestown, New Jersey
J
Frances C. Jenkins (1826–1915), American evangelist, Quaker minister, and social reformer
Rebecca Jones (1739–1818), Quaker minister and educator
Rufus Jones (1863–1948), American Quaker theologian
T. Canby Jones (b. 1921), American Quaker peace campaigner, theologian, and academic
K
L
Joseph Lancaster (1778–1838), public education innovator
Lydia Lancaster (1683–1761), English born travelling minister
Benjamin Lay (1681–1760), Quaker abolitionist
John C. Lettsome (1744–1815), English physician and founder of the Medical Society of London
Raph Levien (living), free software author behind Ghostscript and Advogato
John Lilburne (1614–1657), Leveller convert to Quakerism
Richard Lippincott (1615–1683), an early settler of Shrewsbury, New Jersey
Joseph Jackson Lister (1786–1869), amateur British optician and physicist and father of Joseph Lister
Kathleen Lonsdale (1903–1971), Irish scientist
M
John Macmurray (1891–1976), philosopher
Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge (b. 1952), South African health minister
Elizabeth Magie (1866–1948), inventor of Monopoly
Ellen Marriage (1865–1946), translator of Balzac
Milton Mayer (1908–1986), American journalist and writer
James Michener (1907–1997), American author
Rosalind Mitchell (b. 1954), Anglo/Scottish politician and writer
Samuel Moore (c. 1630–1688), early official in New Jersey
Ethan Mordden (b. 1949), American writer
Ruth Morris (1933–2001), Canadian advocate of the abolition of prisons
Samuel Morris (soldier) (1734–1812), participated in the American Revolutionary War despite his upbringing.
Lucretia Mott (1793–1880), American abolitionist and suffragist
Rich Mullins (1955–1997), American Christian singer and songwriter
Lindley Murray (1745–1826), author of Murray's English Reader
Edward R. Murrow (1908–1965), journalist
N
James Nayler (1618–1660), former soldier, then member of the Valiant Sixty
Edmund Hort New (1871–1931), English artist and illustrator
Carrie Newcomer (living), American singer-songwriter
Sir George Newman (1870–1948), British chief medical officer
Samuel Nicholas (1744–1790), first commandant of the United States Marine Corps
Sally Nicholls (b. 1983), English children's author
Nitobe Inazō (新渡戸稲造, 1862–1933), Japanese diplomat, educator and author
Richard Nixon (1913–1994), 37th president of the United States
John Howard Nodal (1831–1909), English journalist and dialectologist
Philip Noel-Baker, Baron Noel-Baker (1889–1982), diplomat and Nobel Peace Prize laureate
O
P
Jason Palmer (b. 1971), American venture capitalist and politician
Parker Palmer (b. 1939), American writer, teacher, and campaigner
Palmolive (musician) (b. 1954), Spanish punk-rock musician
David Parlett (b. 1939), English writer and games inventor
James Parnell (c. 1636–1656), preacher and writer known as "The Boy Martyr", credited with converting many to the Quakers, including Stephen Crisp
Evalyn Parry , Canadian performance-maker, theatrical innovator and singer-songwriter
Alice Paul (1885–1977), American suffragist
Edward Pease (1767–1858), English railway owner[citation needed ]
Joseph Pease (1799–1872), first Quaker British member of Parliament
Sir Joseph Whitwell Pease (1824–1903), Liberal politician and businessman
Joseph Albert Pease, 1st Baron Gainford (1860–1943), Liberal politician and businessman
Joseph Pease, 2nd Baron Gainford (1889–1971), businessman
George Pease, 4th Baron Gainford (b. 1926), architect and town planner
Isaac Penington (1616–1679), early English Quaker
Gulielma Maria Posthuma (Springett) Penn (1644–1694), first wife of William Penn
Hannah Callowhill Penn (1671–1726), second wife of William Penn
William Penn (1644–1718), English-born founder of Pennsylvania
Herb Pennock (1894–1948), American baseball player
Jonathan Pim (1806–1885), Irish philanthropist and politician, secretary of the Quaker Relief Fund during the Irish famine and later Liberal MP for Dublin
Olive Pink , Australian botanical illustrator and campaigner for aboriginal rights
Robert Pleasants (1723–1801), American abolitionist and educator[citation needed ]
William Pollard (1828–1893), English Quaker writer and minister
Jacob Post (1774–1855), English religious writer
Oliver Postgate (1925–2008), English animator, creator of Bagpuss
Gerald Priestland , BBC broadcaster
Edmond Privat , Swiss ambassador of Esperanto international language, journalist, historian and university teacher
Robert Proud (1728–1813), English educator and historian known for research into the Province of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania Colony)
Walter Pumphrey (fl. 1678), English-born American farmer and carpenter[citation needed ]
William Pumphrey (1817–1905), pioneer English photographer
Q
R
Arthur Raistrick (1896–1991), English conscientious objector, geologist, and industrial archaeologist
Edith Reeves (fl. early 20th c.), American silent film actress
Richard Reynolds (1735–1816), English ironmaster at Coalbrookdale
William Reynolds (1758–1803), English ironmaster and scientist
John Richardson (1667–1753), English Quaker minister and autobiographer
John Wigham Richardson (1837–1908), English shipbuilder
Lewis Fry Richardson (1881–1953), English mathematician and geophysicist
Enid Lucy Robertson AM (1925–2016), Australian systematic botanist and conservationist
Tom Robinson (b. 1950), English rock musician and disc jockey
Fred Rowntree (1860–1927), English architect
Joseph Rowntree (1801–1859), English chocolate maker and educationist
Thomas Rudyard (c. 1640–1692), English lawyer and Deputy Governor of East Jersey
Bayard Rustin (1912–1987), American civil rights leader
Thomas Rutter (1660–1730), American ironmaster and abolitionist
S
Susanna M. Salter (1860–1961), first woman mayor in the United States
Clive Sansom (1910–1981), English, then Tasmanian poet, playwright and educator
William Savery (1750–1804), American Quaker preacher, abolitionist and defender of the rights of Native Americans
Molly Scott Cato (b. 1963), British politician
Elizabeth Clare Scurfield (b. 1950), English sinologist
Andrea Seabrook (b. c. 1974), American journalist and broadcaster
Ian Serraillier (1912–1994), English novelist, poet and children's writer, who joined the Society of Friends in 1939
Anthony Sharp (1643–1707), Dublin wool merchant
Isaac Sharp (1681–1735), early New Jersey settler and landowner
Philip Sherman (1611–1687), English-born first secretary of state of Rhode Island
H. T. Silcock (1882–1969), English Quaker missionary
Jeanmarie Simpson (b. 1959), American theatre artist and peace activist
Joan Slonczewski (b. 1956), American biologist and science fiction writer
Joseph Southall (1861–1944), English painter and pacifist
Lawrence and Cassandra Southwick (c. 1600–1660), English-born colonial American Quakers persecuted with their children for their religious beliefs
Jane Sowle (c. 1631–1711), English printer and publisher
Tace Sowle (1666-1749), English printer and publisher
Helen Steven (1942–2016), Scottish peace activist
Dorothy Stowe (1920–2010), American-born Canadian social activist and environmentalist, co-founder of Greenpeace
Emily Stowe (1831–1903), The first female physician to practise in Canada, and an activist for women's rights and suffrage.
Irving Stowe (1915–1974), American-born social activist and environmentalist, co-founder of Greenpeace
John Strettell (1721–1786), English merchant
Robert Strettell (1693–1762), Irish-born American Quaker convert, early mayor of Philadelphia
Joseph Sturge (1793–1859), British abolitionist
Thomas Sturge (1787–1866), British businessman, shipowner and philanthropist
Thomas Sturge the elder (1749–1825), British oil merchant and philanthropist
Donald Swann (1923–1994), Welsh-born composer, musician and entertainer
Noah Haynes Swayne (1804–1884), American jurist and politician
T
Jonathan Talbot (b. 1939), American artist, author, and educator
Heather Tanner (1903–1993), English writer and peace campaigner
Robin Tanner (1904–1988), English artist, etcher and printmaker
John Tawell Murderer
Henry S. Taylor , winner of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1986
Joseph Taylor (b. 1941), American winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
Valerie Taylor (1913–1997), American novelist
Philip E. Thomas (1776–1861), first president of the B&O Railroad (the first railroad in the US)
Thomas Tompion (1639–1713), English clockmaker
Peterson Toscano (b. 1965), American actor, playwright and gay activist
Theophila Townsend (d. 1692), English writer and activist
Connor Trinneer (b. 1969), actor
D. Elton Trueblood (1900–1994), theologian
Benjamin Franklin Trueblood (1847–1916) was an American pacifist who served the American Peace Society for 23 years
Daniel Hack Tuke (1827–1895), English physician and expert in mental illness
Henry Tuke (1755–1814), English co-founder of the York Retreat
Henry Scott Tuke , RA RWS (1858–1929), English visual artist, painter and photographer notable for Impressionist style
James Hack Tuke (1819–1896), English businessman and philanthropist in Ireland
Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), English philanthropist and campaigner for the mentally ill
William Tuke (1732–1822), English philanthropist and campaigner for the mentally ill
James Turrell (b. 1943), American artist
Edward Burnett Tylor (1832–1917), English anthropologist
V
Jo Vallentine (b. 1946), peace activist and senator for Western Australia
William Vickrey (1914–1996), Canadian economist and Nobel Prize winner
Elfrida Vipont Foulds (1902–1992), English novelist, school principal and Quaker activist
W
Terry Waite (b. 1939), English humanitarian and author, Archbishop of Canterbury's special envoy
Priscilla Wakefield (1751–1832), English educational writer and philanthropist
Mary Vaux Walcott (1860–1940), American botanical artist
George Washington Walker (1800–1859), English missionary in Australia
Ann Warder (1758–1829), American diarist
Robert Spence Watson (1837–1911), English solicitor, reformer and writer
Benjamin West (1738–1820), American painter
Catherine West (b. 1966), UK Member of Parliament
Jessamyn West (1902–1984), American novelist
Joseph Wharton (1826–1909), American merchant, industrialist and philanthropist
Daniel Wheeler (1771–1840), English minister and missionary
Barclay White (1821–1906), American Superintendent of Indian Affairs
Dorothy White (c. 1630–1686), English religious pamphleteer
George Whitehead (1636–1723), English Quaker lobbyist, preacher and writer
Joan Whitrowe (c. 1631–1707 ), an English religious writer, visionary and polemicist .
John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892), American poet
John Richardson Wigham (1829–1906), Scottish-born Irish inventor and lighthouse engineer
John Wilbur (1774–1856), prominent American Quaker minister and thinker
Jemima Wilkinson (excommunicated 1776), the Publick Universal Friend
Waldo Williams (1904–1971), Welsh-language poet and pacifist
Lillian Willoughby (c. 1916–2009), American peace campaigner
Emilie Dorothy Hilliard Willson (c. 1838–1899) American-born wife of John Joseph Willson and artist
Emilie Dorothy Willson (1867–1918) English artist and twin of Margaret Willson
Hannah Willson (c. 1829–1918) English artist
John Joseph Willson (c. 1837–1903) English leather manufacturer and artist
Margaret Willson (1867–1932) English artist and twin sister of Emilie Dorothy Willson
Mary A. Hilliard Willson (1871–1928) English artist
Michael Anthony Hilliard Willson (1863–1943) English artist
Drusilla Wilson (1815–1908), American temperance leader and Quaker pastor
Anna Wing (1914–2013), English actress
Gerrard Winstanley (1609–1676), English social and religious reformer
Caspar Wistar (1696–1752), German-born Pennsylvania glassmaker
Mary Chawner Woody (1846–1928), American Quaker minister; educator; president, North Carolina Woman's Christian Temperance Union
John Woolman (1720–1772), American Quaker preacher and campaigner against slavery
Thomas William Worsdell (1838–1916), English steam locomotive engineer
Wilson Worsdell (1850–1920), English steam locomotive engineer
Y
People with Quaker roots
Individuals whose parents were Quakers or who were Quakers themselves at one time in their lives but then converted to another religion, formally or informally distanced themselves from the Society of Friends, or were disowned by their Friends Meeting.
Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906), American suffragist , abolitionist , and pioneer of feminism and civil rights
Herbert W. Armstrong (1892–1986), American founder of the Worldwide Church of God
Kevin Bacon (b. 1958), American actor of Quaker extraction
L. S. Bevington (1845–1895), English anarchist poet, essayist and journalist
Morris Birkbeck (1764–1825), American farmer, writer, and promoter of emigration to Illinois
Daniel Boone (1735–1820), American frontiersman
Maria Louisa Bustill (1853–1904), American teacher, mother of Paul Robeson
Smedley Butler (1881–1940), U.S. Marine and social activist
Ilka Chase (1900–1978), American actress and novelist
Benjamin Chew , American chief justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania , became Anglican in the 1750s.
Ezra Cornell (1807–1874), American founder of Cornell University , expelled for marrying outside the faith
Warder Cresson (1798–1860), American campaigner, author, and convert to Judaism
Emily Deschanel (b. 1976), American actress and television producer of Quaker extraction
Zooey Deschanel (b. 1980), American actress and singer/songwriter/musician of Quaker extraction
John Dickinson (1732–1808), American lawyer and governor of Delaware and Pennsylvania
Nathan Dunn (1782–1844), American businessman and collector, disowned in 1816 but a follower of Quaker ethics in further life
Sarah Stickney Ellis (1799–1872), English writer on women's roles, became a Congregationalist .
Samuel Tertius Galton (1783–1844), English businessman and scientist, convert to Anglicanism
Jesse Gause (1785–1836), early American leader of Latter Day Saint movement
Nathanael Greene (1742–1786), American major-general in the Continental Army , member of the Rhode Island General Assembly , third quartermaster general , disowned by the Quakers in 1773
Maria Hack (1777–1844), English educational writer and contributor to the Isaac Crewdson controversy
Sarah C. Hall (1832-1926), physician
Sam Harris (b. 1967), American author of The End of Faith with a possibly lapsed Quaker father
Jonathan Hazard (1744–1824), American statesman and anti-federalist
Louisa Gurney Hoare (1784–1836), writer on education, convert to Anglicanism
Bulmer Hobson (1883–1969), Irish republican militant and politician, resigned membership when he became involved in paramilitarism
Thomas Hornor (1767–1834), Canadian farmer and politician, expelled for freemasonry and joining a militia
John Eliot Howard (1807–1883), English chemist and developer of quinine
Luke Howard (1772–1864), English chemist and meteorologist, involved in the Beaconite Controversy and later associated with the Plymouth Brethren
Andrew John Hozier-Byrne , aka Hozier (1990–), singer-songwriter and musician
Alfred Hunt (1817–1888), American industrialist
Eric Knight (1897–1943), English-born novelist and children's writer, author of Lassie Come-Home (1940)
Lyndon LaRouche (b. 1922), American disowned in 1941
David Lean (1908–1991), British film director
Joseph Lister (1827–1912), English surgeon who promoted the idea of sterile surgery
E. V. Lucas (1868–1938), English writer
Dolley Madison (1768–1849), American first lady
Dave Matthews (b. 1967), South African-born American musician
Thomas Merton (1915–1968). Though his mother was an American Quaker and he attended some meetings, he was baptized and primarily raised an Anglican.
Maria Mitchell (1818–1889), an Australian, one of the first women in astronomy, who retained ties to the Quakers but became a Unitarian
Russ Nelson (b. 1958), American open-source software developer
Richard Nixon (1913–1994), American President
Thomas Paine (1737–1809), Anglo-American political philosopher and revolutionary; father a Quaker, but he a non-religious deist
Hilary Douglas Clark Pepler (1878–1951), English convert to Catholicism, who founded The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic
Bonnie Raitt (b. 1949), American singer and musician
Thomas Rickman (1776–1841), English architect and author, and major figure in the Gothic Revival
Thomas 'Clio' Rickman (1760–1834), English political pamphleteer and friend of Thomas Paine
Ned Rorem (1923–2022), composer of art songs and of a substantial work for organ, "A Quaker Reader"
Anna Sewell (1820–1878), English children's writer, converted to Anglicanism about 1838
Joseph Henry Shorthouse (1834–1903), English novelist, converted to Anglicanism in 1861
Hannah Whitall Smith (1832–1911), American-born evangelical holiness preacher, suffragist and temperance campaigner
Robert Pearsall Smith (1827–1898), American-born leading figure in the UK Higher Life movement ; later began to entertain notions of spiritual wifery, was criticized, and eventually claimed to be a Buddhist.
David Starkey (b. 1945), English historian and broadcaster
Satyananda Stokes (1882–1946), American raised a Quaker as "Samuel Evans Stokes, Jr.", later converting to Hinduism
Justin Sullivan (b. 1956), English singer-songwriter and lead singer for New Model Army
Cheryl Tiegs (b. 1947), American model, current religious status uncertain
Alfred Waterhouse (1830–1905), English architect, baptised into the Church of England in 1877
William Weeks (1813–1900), American architect and temporary convert to Mormonism
Walt Whitman (1819–1892), eminent American poet, born to Hicksite Quaker parents
See also
References
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^ Dennis, Barbara. "Shorthouse, Joseph Henry (1834–1903)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/36077 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ a b "Author info: Hannah Whitall Smith – Christian Classics Ethereal Library" . www.ccel.org . Retrieved 1 January 2023 .
^ See Milligan, Edward H. "Smith , Hannah (1832–1911)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/47062 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ Barratt, Nick (27 January 2007). "Family detective" . The Daily Telegraph . London. Archived from the original on 31 March 2007. Retrieved 18 April 2021 .
^ "The Sunday Tribune – Spectrum – Books" . www.tribuneindia.com . Retrieved 1 January 2023 .
^ Time Magazine [dead link ] : The Tiegs family went to Quaker meetings on Sundays.
^ Cunningham, Colin. "Waterhouse, Alfred (1830–1905)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/36758 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ p. 102, Alfred Waterhouse 1830–1905 Biography of a Practice, Colin Cunningham & Prudence Waterhouse, 1992, Oxford University Press
^ Bennion, Marjorie Hopkins. "The Rediscovery of William Weeks' Nauvoo Temple Drawings" (PDF) . Mormon Historical Studies . 3 (1): 73–90.
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