William Penn and the Dutch Quaker Migration to Pennsylvania

William Penn and the Dutch Quaker Migration to Pennsylvania

by Prof. William I. Hull
William Penn and the Dutch Quaker Migration to Pennsylvania

William Penn and the Dutch Quaker Migration to Pennsylvania

by Prof. William I. Hull

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Overview

“The original purpose of this monograph was to tell the European half of the story of William Penn’s relations with the Dutch Quakers who emigrated to Pennsylvania. But the predominance of the Dutch Quaker pioneers, as revealed by that story, in the settlement of Germantown made it desirable to follow them across the Atlantic and indicate the part which they played for at least a quarter-century in the affairs of the Quaker colony.

“Hence the study comprises, first, Penn’s efforts on his three journeys to Holland and Germany to convert to Quakerism the Labadists, Pietists and Quietists whom he found there; second, the way in which small Quaker communities on the Continent had prepared the way for these visits; and finally, the rise and progress of those congregations of Dutch and German Quakers who, fleeing from persecution, accepted Penn’s invitation to settle in Pennsylvania.”—William I. Hull, Introduction

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781789121971
Publisher: Papamoa Press
Publication date: 09/03/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 399
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

William Isaac Hull (November 19, 1868 - November 14, 1939) was an American Quaker, pacifist and history teacher at Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania for 47 years.

Born in Baltimore, MD, Hull received his A.B. in 1889 and Ph.D. in 1892 from Johns Hopkins University. He also studied history abroad at the University of Berlin (1891) and the University of Leyden (1907). In 1892 he became the youngest faculty member at Swarthmore College when he was appointed Associate Professor of History and Economics. He served as Joseph Wharton Professor of History and Political Science (1894-1904), Professor of History (1904-1911), Isaac H. Clothier Professor of History and International Relations (1911-1929), Howard M. Jenkins Research Professor of Quaker History (1929-1939), and Librarian, Friends Historical Library (1936-1939).

Committed to world organization, disarmament, and international arbitration, Hull attended the Second International Conference at the Hague in 1907. In 1908 he published a history of the two Hague conferences, The Two Hague Conferences and Their Contributions to International Law Boston, which was widely used as a text and a reference book. He was U.S. Delegate to the International Conference on Education at the Hague (1914-1915), an official observer in Paris during the writing of the Covenant of the League of Nations, and attended the Washington Naval Conference in 1922 and the General Disarmament Conference at Geneva in 1932.

He was appointed Quaker representative on the board of the Church Peace Union in 1914, serving as trustee for many years. He was also a Director of the World Peace Foundation, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Arbitration and Peace Society, and a frequent lecturer for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. In 1929 he was appointed Howard M. Jenkins Research Professor of Quaker History and wrote extensively on Quaker history, especially on Dutch Quakers and on William Penn.
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