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Society of Friends in Ohio Collection
mssSFO  
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Collection Details
 
Table of contents What's This?
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Conditions Governing Use
  • Preferred Citation
  • Immediate Source of Acquisition
  • Biographical / Historical
  • Scope and Contents
  • Processing Information
  • Arrangement
  • General
  • Bibliography

  • Contributing Institution: The Huntington Library
    Title: Society of Friends in Ohio collection
    Identifier/Call Number: mssSFO
    Physical Description: 0.42 Linear Feet (1 box)
    Date (inclusive): 1789-1915
    Date (bulk): 1851-1869
    Abstract: Collection of papers relating to the Society of Friends in Ohio (Orthodox).
    Language of Material: Materials are in English.

    Conditions Governing Access

    Open for use by qualified researchers and by appointment. Please contact Reader Services at the Huntington Library for more information.

    Conditions Governing Use

    The Huntington Library does not require that researchers request permission to quote from or publish images of this material, nor does it charge fees for such activities. The responsibility for identifying the copyright holder, if there is one, and obtaining necessary permissions rests with the researcher.

    Preferred Citation

    [Identification of item]. Society of Friends in Ohio collection, The Huntington Library, San Marino, California.

    Immediate Source of Acquisition

    Assembled at the Library from items donated by Mrs. Howard E. Carpenter and Daniel J. Jaeger, 1953 and 1965.

    Biographical / Historical

    Quakers, also called Friends, belong to a historically Christian denomination known formally as the Religious Society of Friends or Friends Church. In the early 1800s, Elias Hicks, a traveling Quaker minister from New York, began to break with traditional Quaker beliefs, and his 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 sometimes as Orthodox.

    Scope and Contents

    Collection of papers relating to the Society of Friends in Ohio (Orthodox). Included are communications and epistles received by Ohio Yearly Meeting from the Yearly Meetings in Philadelphia, New York, and Maryland; minutes and other records of the Stillwater, Short Creek, and Redstone Monthly and Quarterly Meetings, marriage announcements, certificates, and other miscellaneous records, including a proposal submitted to the Yearly meeting for establishing labor schools, approximately 1840. The collection also contains some personal letters discussing religious practice, theology, history, child rearing, etc. Also included are: an epistle from Women Friends Meeting in London to Women Friends Yearly Meeting in Philadelphia, 1789, two addresses to a "Spiritual Improvement Society", by Edward Hoops, 1840, two short memoirs of the underground railroad and Quaker abolitionists, and a copy of August Diamond's Levi Coffin, the friend of the slave, published for the Friends' Tract Association (London : Headley Bros.; New York : Friends' Book & Tract Committee), approximately 1915. The collection also contains a bound manuscript "Memoirs of Rachel E. Paterson, 1828-1869." Rachel E. Paterson (born 1810) was a Quaker preacher, daughter of James Edgerton and Anne Hall, members of Stillwater Monthly Meeting (Orthodox). The manuscript consists of copies of letters that she exchanged with her family.

    Processing Information

    Processed by Olga Tsapina in March 2003. In 2022, Brooke M. Black created an online finding aid.

    Arrangement

    Arranged chronologically.

    General

    Former call number: mssSociety of Friends.

    Bibliography

    Rachel E. Paterson's manuscript is further described in: Balderston, Marion, "Rachel Patterson, Primitive Quaker," Quaker History: 50 (Spring 1970): 44-48.

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Society of Friends -- Ohio -- History -- Sources
    Quaker abolitionists -- Ohio -- History
    Quaker women -- History -- Sources
    Quaker women -- Ohio
    Quakers -- Ohio -- Archives
    Quakers -- United States -- History -- Sources
    Underground Railroad -- Ohio
    Ohio -- Church history -- 19th century
    Letters (correspondence) -- United States
    Minutes (administrative records) -- Ohio -- 19th century
    Ohio Yearly Meeting of Friends (Orthodox : 1828-1854)
    Diamond, Augustus -- Levi Coffin, the friend of the slave
    Paterson, Rachel E., 1810-