Anne Whitehead

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Anne Whitehead
Born
Anne Downer

c.1624
Died28 July 1686
NationalityUnited Kingdom
Known forearly Quaker
Spouse(s)George Whitehead
Parent(s)Thomas and Mary Downer

Anne Whitehead or Anne Downer; Anne Greenwell (c. 1624 – 28 July 1686) was an English Quaker organizer, preacher and writer. She underwent severe distraints for her beliefs.

Life and work[]

Whitehead was born in Charlbury in about 1624 to Thomas and Mary Downer. Her father was vicar and her maternal grandfather is thought to have been Ralph Hutchinson, who was a biblical scholar and college head at Oxford University.[1]

Quakerism[]

Quakerism spread during Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth that followed the English Civil War. Anne Downer moved to London and joined the Religious Society of Friends there in 1654.[2]

In 1655 she became the first Quaker woman preacher, for which she was imprisoned and beaten.[2] In 1656 she preached in Chadlington, and then went to Launceston prison in Cornwall to serve as secretary to the Quaker leader George Fox.[2] She then preached at her home town of Charlbury, where Quaker meetings were held in the homes of William Cole and Alexander Harris.[2] Both men were jailed in 1657–1658 for refusing to pay tithes to the Church of England; Cole died in prison.[2]

Many Quakers in Charlbury were distrained for refusing to pay the Church Rate.[2] In 1660 a Chadlington Quaker who attended the Charlbury meetings was jailed for refusing to swear the Oath of Allegiance, and in 1663 Henry Shad, a Quaker schoolmaster, was barred from teaching.[2]

Anne Whitehead played a signifcant role within London Quakers’ women’s meetings, promoting piety, plainness, and older Friends teaching younger members Quaker values.[3] She campaigned for an end to the persecution of Quakers, writing for both Quakers and non-Quakers, including For the King and both houses of Parliament. Much of her work was on the role of women within the Quaker community.[3]

Personal life[]

She married Quaker Benjamin Greenwell on 24 March 1663. He was imprisoned in Newgate prison under a sentence of banishment, dying there on 5 February 1665. The couple had no children.[1]

In 1670 she married George Whitehead at the Peel meeting of Quakers in Clerkenwell. Her new husband was a Quaker preacher who had been imprisoned, whipped and placed in the stocks because of his religion. He later described her as 'like a Tender Mother' to him.[4]

Anne Whitehead died in Middlesex in 1686.[1] Her husband George to publish a collection of personal testimonies to her memory, Piety Promoted by Faithfulness (1686). Among those to laud her was Mary Forster in her 1686 work Piety Promoted.[5] She was posthumously referred to as a “mother in Israel”.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Catie Gill, "Whitehead , Anne (c. 1624–1686)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online ed., January 2015 accessed 14 August 2017
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Crossley et al. 1972, pp. 127–157
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c Rosner, Isabella (2021), "Whitehead, Anne", The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Early Modern Women's Writing, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 1–3, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-01537-4_228-1, ISBN 978-3-030-01537-4, retrieved 24 July 2021
  4. ^ Nigel Smith, "Whitehead, George (1637–1724)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 14 Aug 2017
  5. ^ Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy, eds, The Feminist Companion to Literature in English. Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 388.

Sources[]

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