Edward Hicks and his Peaceable Kingdom comes to Goose Creek Meeting
Edward Hicks (1780-1849) was a Quaker minister who supported his family by painting commercial signs in the Philadelphia area. HeContinue Reading
Letters, memoirs and documents of 19th century Quakers in Lincoln, Virginia
Edward Hicks (1780-1849) was a Quaker minister who supported his family by painting commercial signs in the Philadelphia area. HeContinue Reading
The National Archives in Washington, D.C. contain thousands of Freemen’s Bureau documents and letters. Many of the letters are onlineContinue Reading
America’s Civil War broke out on April 12, 1861 with the South Carolina battle of Ft. Sumter. Eleven states secededContinue Reading
Pausanias (AD 110- C 180) was a Greek geographer and author of travel books which included his observations about people andContinue Reading
A thorough and insightful article can be read here, “The Freedmen’s Bureau in Loudoun County, Virginia: Getting Started, June 1865Continue Reading
Catherine Mary Powell Noland Cochran (1814-1895) wrote a memoir and diary of her dramatic experiences during the Civil War. HerContinue Reading
Prior to the Civil War Quaker miller Asa Moore Janney (1802-1877) moved his family from Richmond to the community ofContinue Reading
Old legal documents often reveal stories that finally end, frustratingly, as mysteries. An example of this is found in theContinue Reading
Sylvanside Farm was first purchased and settled by the Greggs, a Quaker family, in 1742. Their descendents lived on theContinue Reading
William Tate kept a Memo book in which he recorded who owed him money for fence rails, when his ewesContinue Reading






