2026 HTHS Spring Talk


2026 HTHS Spring Talk

The Philadelphia Quakers and the American Revolution

Monday, April 20, 2020 6:30 – 8:30 pm
Where: Haverford Twp Library Community Room 1601 Darby Rd, Havertown

Fleeing political upheavals in England for settlement in the New World, Quakers rose to unprecedented economic and political power in the Pennsylvania colony. However, the failure of the Quaker-dominated government to provide for defense in the wars from the 1730s into the 1760s was the beginning of their downfall. By the Revolution, their fortunes had waned, and they were brutally suppressed by their political foes. Seventeen Quakers and three others were exiled to Virginia without so much as a hearing, and Quaker farms and businesses were subject to depredations. Labeled dissenters by Loyalist and Patriot alike, they stood their ground, alone and isolated.

Through the words of those who were there, author and historian Jeff Denman vividly describes the precipitous rise of the Philadelphia Quakers and their fall
during the American Revolution.

Biography
Jeff Denman is a former American history teacher, author and historian from the Brookline Public Schools in Brookline, MA; University of Maine, B.S.; University of Connecticut, M.A.; He has published seven articles on subjects ranging from the American Revolution to World War II; co-author of Greene and Cornwallis in the Carolinas: The Pivotal Struggle of the American Revolution, 1780-81; author of John Quincy Adams, Reluctant Abolitionist; author of Philadelphia Quakers and the American Revolution; current project: Closing the Ring: George Washington’s War in the North, 1778-1781 (July 2026).