Benjamin Lay And The Fake Blood Protest
On 19 September, 1738, the Quaker Benjamin Lay entered Friends Meeting House in Burlington, New Jersey, with fake blood.
Read moreOn 19 September, 1738, the Quaker Benjamin Lay entered Friends Meeting House in Burlington, New Jersey, with fake blood.
Read moreWith over 350 years of witness, the Quaker Testimonies have evolved and changed over time.
Read moreInnocent Trades is the historic Quaker term for industries that Friends believed ethical and did no harm.
Read moreQuakers are not forbidden from taken alcohol (or tobacco), but most Quakers avoid them, or consume them moderately.
Read moreThe Frame of the Government of the Province of Pennsylvania was written by the Quaker William Penn in 1682.
Read moreThe Journal of George Fox is arguably the best primary source for learning how Quakerism began, took shape and grew.
Read moreAt 28-feet-long and 14-feet high, the bronze Underground Railroad Sculpture is America’s largest monument to ending slavery.
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