http://www.rssboard.org/rss-specification 720 XTF Search Results (docsPerPage=100;f129-subject=Quakers -- Ohio.) http://norton.wrhs.org/collections/search?docsPerPage%3D100;f129-subject%3DQuakers%20--%20Ohio. Results for your query: docsPerPage=100;f129-subject=Quakers -- Ohio. Tue, 28 Jul 2020 12:00:00 GMT George K. Jenkins Papers. Jenkins, George K. http://norton.wrhs.org/collections/view?docId=ead/MS0100.xml George K. Jenkins was a Quaker teacher in Mount Pleasant, Ohio, during the nineteenth century. The collection includes minutes, lists of certificates, members and marriages, and other records of various meetings of the Society of Friends in Delaware, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia; records of Quaker schools and organizations, including the Ohio Yearly Meeting and its Committee on Indian Affairs, the New Garden Monthly Meeting, the Short Creek Meeting, and the Free Produce Association. Includes a journal of Jenkins' observations of Quaker colonies he visited in Canada, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia; an account of the immigration of William Harrison from York County, Virginia, to Mount Pleasant, Ohio (1817); and a memoranda book (1849-60) kept by David Updegraff on visits to Yearly Meetings in Indiana, Maryland and Pennsylvania. http://norton.wrhs.org/collections/view?docId=ead/MS0100.xml Thu, 01 Jan 2015 12:00:00 GMT John Otis Wattles and Esther Whinery Wattles Family Papers. Wattles, John Otis and Esther Whinery http://norton.wrhs.org/collections/view?docId=ead/MS5041.xml John Otis Wattles was a radical Hicksite Quaker and an ardent abolitionist. With his brother Augustus, John founded the Prairie Home Community in Logan County, Ohio; the Clermont/Excelsior, Ohio, utopian community; and, later, the town of Moneka, Kansas. John married Esther Whinery, an elementary school teacher, in 1844. The Wattles brothers and Esther actively defended John Brown. They continued to promote abolitionism and utopian communal living until John Wattles' death in 1859. Esther and her three daughters then returned from Kansas to Oberlin, Ohio, where the girls attended Oberlin College. Esther died in Coconut Grove, Florida, in 1908. The collection consists of articles of incorporation, autobiographies, by-laws, correspondence, essays, genealogical charts, journals, ledger books, lists, magazine and newspaper clippings, memoirs, minutes, notes, obituaries, poems, a scrapbook, speech texts, and wills. http://norton.wrhs.org/collections/view?docId=ead/MS5041.xml Wed, 01 Jan 2014 12:00:00 GMT