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  2. The Friend (Quaker magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Friend_(Quaker_magazine)

    The Friend is a weekly Quaker magazine published in London, UK. It is the only Quaker weekly in the world, and has been published continuously since 1843. It began as a monthly and in January 1892 became a weekly. [1] It is one of the oldest continuously published publications in the world still in operation.

  3. Friends Journal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends_Journal

    Friends Journal is a monthly Quaker magazine that combines first-person narrative, reportage, poetry, and news. [1] Friends Journal began publishing in 1827 and 1844 with the founding of The Friend (Orthodox, 1827—1955) and The Friends Intelligencer (Hicksite, 1844—1955).

  4. Category:Quaker organizations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Quaker_organizations

    Friends Journal; The Friend (Quaker magazine) Friends Association for Higher Education; Friends Foreign Mission Association (1868–1927) Friends General Conference; Friends Service Council (1927–1978) Friends' Ambulance Unit; Fund for Reconciliation and Development

  5. Quaker missionaries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaker_missionaries

    James Backhouse, botanist and missionary for the Quaker church in Australia. Daniel Wheeler was a British Quaker who made missionaries efforts in Russia, the South Pacific, and North America. John Yeardley was born in Yorkshire, England. He joined the Quakers in 1806 and started preaching in 1815.

  6. Conservative Friends - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_Friends

    Conservative Friends women have traditionally practiced headcovering as taught in 1 Corinthians 11:2–10 by wearing a "scarf, bonnet, or cap" and "wear long-sleeved, long dresses". [7] Conservative Friends also maintain the type of business meeting which was in use among all branches of Friends until the middle of the twentieth century.

  7. Category:Quakerism in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Quakerism_in_the...

    The Friend (Quaker magazine) Friends' Ambulance Unit; J. Junior Young Friends; L. The Leaveners; P. Pardshaw Young Friends' Centre; Q. Quakers and Moravians Act 1838 ...

  8. Valiant Sixty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valiant_Sixty

    She opened her home, Swarthmoor Hall, to Quaker meetings. She later married Fox. Edward Burrough was an early preacher and apologist for the Friends who held a pamphlet debate with John Bunyan. Mary Fisher was a preacher and missionary who travelled to the New World and to Turkey to spread Friends beliefs.

  9. Mary Stone McDowell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Stone_McDowell

    The New York Times editorialized that the McDowell case proved that Quakers (a.k.a. "Friends") and other pacifists ought not to be allowed to teach children.. It becomes the Friends to retire from and to keep out of positions which in their very nature involved the declaration and teaching of patriotism as it is understood by a majority of human beings so large that its members have a right to ...