ContentsBIOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL NOTE SCOPE AND CONTENT OF THE RECORDS DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE RECORDS |
Joshua Evans Papers, ca. 1788- ca. 1804FHL staff2000
BIOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL NOTEJoshua Evans, a Quaker farmer, minister, and abolitionist, was born in 1731, the son of Thomas and Rebecca Evans of Haddonfield Monthly Meeting, New Jersey. In 1753, he married Priscilla Collins under the care of Haddonfield Monthly Meeting. About the year 1754, he experienced a religious conversion and thereafter, devoted his life to sharing his rigorous interpretation of the gospel through an ascetic and pious life style and simple ministry. Barely educated, he was nevertheless acknowledged as a minister by Haddonfield Monthly Meeting in 1759 and visited Friends in New Jersey, New York, the South, and elsewhere, mostly in the period 1788-1798. Evans was a vegetarian and a fervent proponent of the peace testimony, Quaker plainness, and ending slavery. He also argued for temperance and the fair treatment of Indians. In 1798, he traveled through the southern states condemning slavery in the strongest terms. Returning to New Jersey, he died in July 1798. Controversial in his own time, Evans is representative of a radical, "primitive" Quaker tradition and reflects the diversity of late eighteenth century Quakerism. Return to the Table of Contents SCOPE AND CONTENT OF THE RECORDSThis collection contains the autobiography (1731-1793) and portions of the journals of Joshua Evan (1731-1798) kept while traveling in the ministry among Friends in New Jersey, New York, the South, and elsewhere, in the period 1794-1798. The copies of the journal in manuscript are attributed to George Churchman and Abraham Warrington, who was the son-in-law of Joshua Evans. One volume is considered an original manuscript in the hand of Joshua Evans. Also included are letters, mounted in a letterbook, mostly to Joshua's second wife, Ann, by Quakers at whose homes Evans stayed while on his religious visits. The collection contains six volumes of the Journals of Joshua Evans's religious ministry on the American continent, from Nova Scotia to the south. Also included is a letter book arranged by Thomas H. Fawcett in 1935 which contains letters, indexed and bound, written mostly to Evan's wife by Quakers at whose homes Joshua Evans stayed during his ministry. An edited version of the journal, A Journal of the Life, Travels, Religious Exercises, and Labours in the Work of the Ministry of Joshua Evans was published in 1827 by John Comly. The manuscripts on which this is based is deposited in the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Caroline and is available the and in the Davis Microform Collection. Return to the Table of Contents INDEX TERMSThis collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the Friends Historical Library (TRIPOD). Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these headings: Return to the Table of Contents This collection is divided into two series: Return to the Table of Contents DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE RECORDSSer. 1. Journals, 1731-1798
Ser. 2. Correspondence, 1788-1797
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