Member of South Marion, Ind. Friends Meeting and a member of the Indiana Yearly Meeting Peace and Christian Social Concerns Committee active in the debate over Indiana Yearly Meeting's affiliation with the American Friends Service Committee. Consists of her letters and memoranda on the AFSC.
Marian Henley Goodwell (1916-1994) was a 1938 graduate of Earlham College and an avid genealogist. This collection consists of material that she collected on her ancestral lines, especially descendants of the early Quaker Patrick Henley of North Carolina. The collection also includes considerable material relating to Carthage, Indiana, the home of her branch of the Henley family. Gift of Kenneth Goodwell and family, 1994-2001.
Benjamin H. Grave (1880-1949) was a 1903 Earlham College graduate and longtime professor of zoology at DePauw University. The collection consists of unpublished essays on science and religion. Gift of Bartram Cadbury, 1997.
Pusey Graves (1813-1899) was a radical abolitionist, freethinker, and spiritualist. Born in Delaware, he lived in Wayne County, Ind., until 1850, when he joined a group of Newport men traveling overland to the California gold fields. The bulk of the collection consists of letters written by Graves to his family on the trail and in California from 1850 to 1852. Finding aid.
Green Pastures Quarterly Meeting is part of the Lake Erie Yearly Meeting affiliated with Friends General Conference. This collection consists of copies of minutes deposited with Lake Erie Yearly Meeting Archives at the Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College.
Stephen Grellet (1773-1855) was an eminent Friends minister, born in France but living most of his life in the Philadelphia area. The collection consists of a transcript of the prayers and sermons at a meeting at Devonshire House Meetinghouse in London in 1814. Origin uncertain.
John C. Griffin (1854-1945) was a Quaker pastor in Indiana, Kansas, and Oklahoma. The collection consists of a scrapbook compiled by his son, J. M. Griffin of Plainfield, Ind., concerning John C. Griffin and his family and Quakers in Plainfield, Mooresville, and Indianapolis, Ind. Gift of White Lick Monthly Meeting, 1993.
Joseph John Gurney (1788-1847) was an eminent Quaker minister, banker, and philanthropist of Earlham Hall near Norwich, England. The collection consists of two letters, 1831 and 1846 by Gurney, a fragment, and a transcript of letters by Gurney and Nathan Hunt (1758-1853) of Guilford County, North Carolina, concerning Quaker views of the Resurrection.
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