1st Edition

Quaker Women Personal Life, Memory and Radicalism in the Lives of Women Friends, 1780–1930

By Sandra Stanley Holton Copyright 2007
    304 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    302 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    One nineteenth-century commentator noted the ‘public’ character of Quaker women as signalling a new era in female history. This study examines such claims through the story of middle-class women Friends from among the kinship circle created by the marriage in 1839 of Elizabeth Priestman and the future radical Quaker statesman, John Bright.

    The lives discussed here cover a period from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries, and include several women Friends active in radical politics and the women’s movement, in the service of which they were able to mobilise extensive national and international networks. They also created and preserved a substantial archive of private papers, comprising letters and diaries full of humour and darkness, the spiritual and the mundane, family confidences and public debate, the daily round and affairs of state.

    The discovery of such a collection makes it possible to examine the relationship between the personal and public lives of these women Friends, explored through a number of topics including the nature of Quaker domestic and church cultures; the significance of kinship and church membership for the building of extensive Quaker networks; the relationship between Quaker religious values and women’s participation in civil society and radical politics and the women’s rights movement. There are also fresh perspectives on the political career of John Bright, provided by his fond but frank women kin.

    This new study is a must read for all those interested in the history of women, religion and politics.

    1. Introduction  2. Margaret Wood (1783–1859), Quaker Spinster and Shopkeeper  3. Kinship, Money and Worldliness: Margaret Wood and ‘a Snug Independence’  4. Rachel Priestman, a ‘Public Friend’  5. Marriages, Births and Deaths: The Formation of the Priestman-Bright Circle  6. Religion, Family and Public Life  7. Sisters, Marriage and Friendship  8. The Single Life: Education, Religion and Reform Among the Priestman-Bright Circle  9. Family, Friendship and Politics  10. Marriage, Money and the Networked Family  11. Helen Clark, Family Life and Politics  12. The Changing Order: Family, Friendship and Politics in the Late Nineteenth Century  13. Suffragism and Democracy  14. The Priestman-Bright Circle and Women’s History

    Biography

    Sandra Holton is Senior Research Fellow in the Department of History, University of Adelaide, South Australia. Her previous publications include Suffrage Days (Routledge, 1996), Feminism and Democracy (Cambridge University Press, 1986) and she co-edited Votes for Women (Routledge, 2000). Her research into on the Priestman – Bright circle has been published in journals including American Historical Review, Victorian Studies, Journal of Women’s History and Women’s History review.

    '...enormous importance to students of Quaker history... a book which should serve as a benchmark for other studies of 'networked families' in this period. To produce such a sustained, coherent and carefully nuanced account from a potentially overwhelming body of source material is a remarkable achievement.' Quaker Studies