Quaker missionaries


Quakers, or the Religious Society of Friends, have been making missionary efforts for centuries. Men and women have made efforts from home and gone abroad to preach their religious message.

Missionary efforts

Quakerism has no ordained clergy. All, regardless of gender, are allowed to minister.
It has been said that, "Most Quaker traveling preachers conformed to the 'evangelical' category in their attempt to annihilate their personal will to submit to the sovereign will of God."

Women's experience

In the Quaker community, it is argued that a higher emphasis has been placed on religiosity rather than home life for women. A significant proportion of Quaker women never married, were widowed, or married late without having children. This allowed women more freedom to pursue religious obligations. Some women chose husbands who were "sympathetic" to their religious pursuits. Female missionaries were mandated to work in pairs of the same sex. Some of these paired women remained close friends for years or even the rest of their lives. Mary Capper and Mary Beesley were one such pair.
Missionary work sometimes called for frequent travel. Quaker women were encouraged to record their sufferings in the face of their faith. These women experienced not only the perils of traveling in the Early Modern Period but also persecution and imprisonment. Women were not alone in facing trials; their families also faced persecution. In England, for example, the Quaker Act of 1662 and other acts led to the imprisonment and death of over 10,000 Quakers. Many of these writings were published and distributed, especially in the Atlantic world.

Chronology of Quaker missionaries

17th century or 1600s

  • Ann Austin and Mary Fisher were English Quaker who preached in North America.
  • Hester Biddle ministered in Ireland, Scotland, Newfoundland, the Netherlands, Barbados, Alexandria, and France.
  • Sarah Blackborow was an early English Quaker and author.
  • Barbara Blaugdone was an English Quaker. She traveled throughout England and Ireland in her ministering efforts. She was jailed and fined several times for sharing her beliefs.
  • Alice Curwen ministered in the Caribbean and New England.
  • Katherine Evans and Sarah Cheevers ministered throughout Europe.They traveled on missions to Scotland, Ireland, and various parts of England. Soon thereafter, they decided to journey to Alexandria. Rachel Warburton claimed that, "Traveling together, part of their purpose was to follow Paul's travels, but they also hoped to meet with and to convert the Sultan." They are best known for an account of their imprisonment by the Roman Inquisition in Malta.
  • Henry Fell was English. He ministered in Barbados and America.
  • George Keith was Scottish. He was a Quaker for part of his life. While he was part of the Religious Society of Friends, he did missionary work in the Netherlands and Germany.
  • Thomas Loe was a missionary who influenced William Penn, another Quaker missionary.
  • John Perrot was likely Irish-born. He converted to Quakerism sometime before 1656 from the Baptist faith. He preached in Ireland, Italy, England, the West Indies, and Virginia.
  • Hannah Stranger was a Quaker who did missionary work in England.
  • Joan Vokins (née Bunce) was an early Quaker missionary from England. She preached in British Colonial America, the West Indian Islands, Ireland, and England.
  • The Valiant Sixty were a group of Quaker preachers from northern England that made missionary efforts Great Britain, Europe, North America, and Turkey. Some of the members of this group were teenagers when they started their missionary work. James Nayler Christopher Atkinson were members.

19th century or 1800s

Missionary efforts in Asia and Africa were made in the latter-part of the century and into the next.

20th century or 1900s