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Esther Sahle. Quakers in the British Atlantic World, c.1660–1800. People, Markets, Goods: Economies and Societies in History 18. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2021. Pp. 218. $25.95 (paper).

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Esther Sahle. Quakers in the British Atlantic World, c.1660–1800. People, Markets, Goods: Economies and Societies in History 18. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2021. Pp. 218. $25.95 (paper).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2024

Naomi Pullin*
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The North American Conference on British Studies

Esther Sahle's Quakers in the British Atlantic World, c.1660–1800 is an important study of the Quaker mercantile community in eighteenth-century London and Philadelphia. Quaker prominence and success in business and industry is well known, but Sahle argues that a historiographical myth surrounds the reasons for the movement's economic success. This has traditionally been explained by three factors. First, Friends’ business ethics that gave Quaker merchants a reputation for honesty and fair dealing, making them trustworthy trading partners. Second, a formal structure that disciplined members who failed to settle their debts. And finally, close kinship ties that arose from a strict doctrine of marital endogamy. All of this suggests a culture of Quaker exceptionalism: that there was something unique about Quaker structures, morals, marital formation, and business practices that explain their prominence in commerce during this period. But was this really the case?

Adopting a comparative and empirical approach to the Quaker communities of London and Philadelphia, Sahle interrogates the extent to which principles of Quaker business ethics, discipline, and marital endogamy translated into the actual business practices of Quaker merchants. Over eleven chapters, Sahle offers an important intervention into a scholarship “rooted in a flawed methodology” (9). After an introduction and outline of the origins and history of the Society of Friends, Sahle focuses chapter 3 on the merchant communities that evolved in the port cities of London and Philadelphia. Sahle effectively shows that while Quaker merchants were numerically prominent and that the scale and reach of their overseas networks set them “apart from others,” they were not disproportionately wealthy (53). Sahle underscores the importance of communal bonds in establishing trading contacts and emphasizes the wide variety of trading endeavors in which Friends were involved. This included commercial activities not consistent with the movement's testimonies, especially trade involving weapons and slave-produced goods and the buying and selling of slaves.

In chapter 4, Sahle compares Quaker business ethics to those of their Anglican and other nonconforming contemporaries. Sahle shows that Quakers and non-Quakers shared similar ethical concerns, especially about covetousness and the vices associated with it. More discussion about Friends’ stance toward luxury and the rigors with which they enforced their testimonies on “plainness” would have enhanced Sahle's tentative conclusion that, even if these business ethics were shared, Friends may have followed these moral codes “with more vigor than others” (74).

In chapters 5 to 8, Sahle questions the extent to which the meetings in London and Philadelphia enforced matters relating to business integrity in practice. Employing meeting minutes and records of disownment, Sahle shows a “dramatic” increase in the policing taking place in Quaker communities from the mid eighteenth century: she regards the numerical increase in sanctions as symptomatic “of a deep-reaching institutional change” (95). New offenses for which members faced condemnation, especially bankruptcy and holding and trading slaves, also emerged in the period after 1750. All of this, Sahle concludes, suggests a greater concern with the outward appearance and status of the movement than with a distinctly Quaker moral code.

In chapter 9, “Marital Endogamy,” Sahle focuses on another important aspect of Quaker discipline: the marital arrangements of Quaker merchants and the penalties members faced for marrying outside the Society of Friends. As in previous chapters, Sahle shows that the frequency and rigor of Quaker discipline increased in the later eighteenth century. However, this more uncompromising attitude toward transgression did not mark Quakers as exceptional. In fact, Quaker meetings, as Sahle suggests, “did not comprehensively enforce marital endogamy, either before or after 1750”; instead, they simply became “more sensitive to breaches of the discipline after 1750” (153). This point, while astute, stands in tension with the communal preoccupation regarding endogamy, even before the mid eighteenth century. Moreover, acknowledging the challenges that offenders faced for breaching Quaker marriage procedure was a missed opportunity, especially given the difficulties that would arise from publicly condemning their choice of spouse. It was also not clear how such unions affected the Society of Friends’ reputation enough to drive an increase in disownments during this period.

In chapter 10, “War and Political Crisis,” Sahle provides a partial explanation to the question of change over time and why the period after 1750 marked such a turning point in the attitudes toward discipline. She achieves this through an incisive analysis of the impact of the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763). This important event, which resulted in the Quakers’ loss of power and influence in Philadelphian politics, shaped how Quakers administered sanctions against their members. In the aftermath of the conflict, there was a need within Quakerism to counter accusations of “dishonesty, avarice and violence” (171). This resulted in “an increased concern over Friends’ collective reputation” (155), which helps to explain some of the motivations for reform across the British Atlantic. Sahle, however, does not fully account for the shift in attitudes that had also been taking place in London. Nor does she explore how the American Revolution also affected the Society of Friends’ reputation in the later eighteenth century. Indeed, as Sarah Crabtree has shown (A Holy Nation: The Transatlantic Quaker Ministry in an Age of Revolution [2015], esp. 32–60, 135–64), the neutral position adopted by Quakers during this conflict had a significant impact on the movement's reputation. More detailed investigation of the Wars of Independence and the emergence of other Quaker ideas and practices, such as their increasing commitment to philanthropy after 1775, would have added additional depth to this part of the argument.

Sahle's work makes an important case for historians to question assumptions about the reasons for Quaker success in trade over this period. The volume of source material consulted is impressive, as is the creative deployment of non-Quaker sources to answer complex questions about Quaker distinctiveness, such as sermons, apprentice records, merchant databases, and slaveholding records. Above all, Quakers in the British Atlantic World is important for pushing historians of the movement to look beyond sectarian divisions and fully embed the history of Quakerism within larger cultural trends and economic developments. This is a study that will thus be of immense interest not only to scholars of early Quakerism, but also to those working in the fields of eighteenth-century economic and social history. It is beyond doubt that the rich empirical analysis of Sahle's study, especially the wealth of information it provides about the nature and impact of early Quaker codes of discipline, will serve as an important source of reference for future historical research.