Nest of Abolitionists
Letters, memoirs and documents of 19th century Quakers in Lincoln, Virginia
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Original Source Material
Lincoln Quakers on Slavery/Abolitionism
Samuel McPherson Janney
Yardley Taylor
Goose Creek “Black Republican” Literary Society Meeting
Francis H. Ray
Circleville
William and Priscilla Tate
Kitty Payne: “…the case in Rappahannock”
Dr. J.E. Snodgrass: “My money – ay, my life would be well sold in such a cause!”
Eliza Coffin Janney Rawson
Lincoln Quakers in the Civil War
Thomas Smith
Lydia Neal Janney Brown
“The Rebellion is now over…” Watson’s Mill Day Book
Elizabeth Rogers Holmes and the Union Star
Carolyn Taylor
Thomas Brown and Phebe Nichols Brown
Goose Creek Meeting and the American Experience
Edward Hicks and the Peaceable Kingdom
Lucretia Mott
“Grandfather” of Indian nations, 1869-1871
Susan B. Anthony
Reconstruction
Yardley Taylor’s letter to Governor Francis Pierpont
Further Reading
Contact
Recent Posts
Amos Norris on the Road to Freedom: from Loudoun County to Niagara Falls
Plain Dress and the Underground Railroad
Slavery in the Quaker World
Pausanias and Goose Creek Quakers
John J. Janney, father of Elizabeth Hopkins Janney
Nest of Abolitionists and the 1820’s Manumission and Emigration movement
Ulysses S. Grant and Loudoun County Quakers
Indiana view of Quakers during the Civil War
John and Ann Janney: A desperate West Indies journey
Henry S. Taylor and the Burning Raid
Rebecca Wright: Quaker teacher, Union spy
The Burning Raid from a Union 7th Michigan Cavalry point of view
Marriage, Reconstruction style
Elizabeth Janney: “a precious woman”
Thomas Brown and Phebe Nichols Brown
Myrtilla Miner
Lincoln, Virginia Quakers bought an enslaved family and set them free.
Asa M. Janney, from Virginia miller to Indian Agent
Quaker William Tate and the Confederate 43rd Virginia Battalion
Confederates and Quakers
General Philip Sheridan explains how to end a War.
Roads to Civil War: a Quaker’s map of Loudoun County
Goose Creek “Black Republicans”
Edward Hicks and his Peaceable Kingdom
“Grandfather” of Indian Nations, 1869-1871
“… a Gun was Fired”
When did the village of Goose Creek become the village of Lincoln?
Dr. J.E. Snodgrass: “… my life would be well sold in such a cause!”
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Home
Original Source Material
Lincoln Quakers on Slavery/Abolitionism
Samuel McPherson Janney
Yardley Taylor
Goose Creek “Black Republican” Literary Society Meeting
Francis H. Ray
Circleville
William and Priscilla Tate
Kitty Payne: “…the case in Rappahannock”
Dr. J.E. Snodgrass: “My money – ay, my life would be well sold in such a cause!”
Eliza Coffin Janney Rawson
Lincoln Quakers in the Civil War
Thomas Smith
Lydia Neal Janney Brown
“The Rebellion is now over…” Watson’s Mill Day Book
Elizabeth Rogers Holmes and the Union Star
Carolyn Taylor
Thomas Brown and Phebe Nichols Brown
Goose Creek Meeting and the American Experience
Edward Hicks and the Peaceable Kingdom
Lucretia Mott
“Grandfather” of Indian nations, 1869-1871
Susan B. Anthony
Reconstruction
Yardley Taylor’s letter to Governor Francis Pierpont
Further Reading
Contact
Recent Posts
Amos Norris on the Road to Freedom: from Loudoun County to Niagara Falls
Plain Dress and the Underground Railroad
Slavery in the Quaker World
Pausanias and Goose Creek Quakers
John J. Janney, father of Elizabeth Hopkins Janney
Nest of Abolitionists and the 1820’s Manumission and Emigration movement
Ulysses S. Grant and Loudoun County Quakers
Indiana view of Quakers during the Civil War
John and Ann Janney: A desperate West Indies journey
Henry S. Taylor and the Burning Raid
Rebecca Wright: Quaker teacher, Union spy
The Burning Raid from a Union 7th Michigan Cavalry point of view
Marriage, Reconstruction style
Elizabeth Janney: “a precious woman”
Thomas Brown and Phebe Nichols Brown
Myrtilla Miner
Lincoln, Virginia Quakers bought an enslaved family and set them free.
Asa M. Janney, from Virginia miller to Indian Agent
Quaker William Tate and the Confederate 43rd Virginia Battalion
Confederates and Quakers
General Philip Sheridan explains how to end a War.
Roads to Civil War: a Quaker’s map of Loudoun County
Goose Creek “Black Republicans”
Edward Hicks and his Peaceable Kingdom
“Grandfather” of Indian Nations, 1869-1871
“… a Gun was Fired”
When did the village of Goose Creek become the village of Lincoln?
Dr. J.E. Snodgrass: “… my life would be well sold in such a cause!”
More Info
Loudoun County death registry
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