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Early Relations of Baptists and Quakers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

R. E. E. Harkness
Affiliation:
Chester, Pennsylvania

Extract

On a little hillside that rises abruptly from the Baltimore Pike, an old highway from Philadelphia to Baltimore, some fifty miles south of Philadelphia, stands a little old meeting-house a-round which gather many interesting historical incidents. It is the home of the Brandywine Baptist Church, on the edge of the famous Brandywine battle field where Washington, joined for the first time by Lafayette, met defeat by the British under Howe and Cornwallis and was forced to abandon Philadelphia, September 11, 1777. Giant oak trees tower high on the hillside to-day and members of the church will point out the one against which, according to tradition, the young French general leaned, severely wounded.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1933

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References

1 Fox, Norman, “George Fox and the Early Friends,” Baptist Quarterly, New York. 10, 1877.Google Scholar

2 Tracts on Liberty of Conscience, Hanserd Knollys Society Edition, 1846. p. 166.Google Scholar

3 Ivimey, Joseph, History of the English Baptists, Vol. II, p. 60.Google Scholar

4 The Journal of George Fox. Everyman's Library, p. 255.Google Scholar

5 Williams, R., George Fox Digg'd out of his Burrowes. Publications of the Narragansett Club, Vol. V, p. 412.Google Scholar

6 Tracts on Liberty of Conscience, Hanserd Knollys, p. 306.Google Scholar

7 Other likenesses are, opposition to singing in church and equality of all.

8 Neal, Daniel, History of the Puritans, Vol. II, p. 134.Google Scholar

9 Ivimey, , History of the Baptists, Vol. II, p. 281.Google Scholar

10 Ibid., p. 596.

11 Records of Fenstanton, Warboys, & Hexham Churches, pp. 131, 146, 352.Google Scholar

12 Ivimey, , op. cit., Vol. II, p. 248.Google Scholar

13 Ibid., p. 598.

14 Ibid., p. 596.

15 Records of a Church of Christ meeting at Broadmead, Bristol, 1640–87, Hanserd Knollys Society, p. 43.Google Scholar

16 Sewel, , op. cit., p. 38.Google Scholar

17 George Fox Digg'd out of his Burrows. Publications of the Narragansett Club. Vol. V. p. 211.Google Scholar

18 Ibid., p. 343.

19 Ibid., p. 307.

20 Tallack, William, George Fox, The Friends and the Early Baptists, p. 79.Google Scholar

21 Roger Williams did not agree with this in his day, so far as New England was concerned.

“I know it is the observation of one of G. Fox his Opposities a man of excellent knowledge, piety & industry, M. Baxter vis. that the Churches of the Independents, & Baptists have been the source and Spring whence have flown the Generation of the Quakers. For my self I have observed the contrary these parts, and that although some rotten Professors, or weak Souls though true have been bewitched by those Soul-witches yet generally where they have Liberty the National Church fills up their numbers. …” George Fox Digg'd, etc., p. 341Google Scholar. And yet according to tradition the first person in Providence to embrace Quakerism was Richard Scot, who had been one of the first Baptists to unite with Roger Williams in the church of that city.