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if she went through with it. White signed the 1829 North Family
Covenant, a legal document promising to live forever as a Shaker without compensation for work in the community, at only nineteen years old (typically it was only signed by those over twenty). White helped with housework, and cared for
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by White personally. After collecting more signatures than any other woman in the state in a petition for disarmament, White was appointed vice president of the New York of the Womenβs
International League of Peace and Arbitration. She also wrote a number of articles, was a leader in Alliance of
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In 1865, White became second eldress to
Antoinette Doolittle, and upon Doolittle's death in 1887, became first eldress. She became a vegetarian following the example of Elder Frederick Evans of the Mount Lebanon Society, and the rest of the North Family followed her example.
151:, called Mansion Square Seminary, and had a strong social conscience influenced by both her faith and her parents. At seventeen, White learned the trade of tailoring, and helped her mother distribute alms from the Quakers to the poor of New York.
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The music of the
Shakers was one of the things that had initially attracted her to the religion, and she would go on to write hundreds of spiritual songs, and compile two books of Shaker music which included some of her own hymns.
143:, the third daughter of five children of Robert White and Hannah (Gibbs) White. Her parents were both Quakers, her father having joined by marriage. One of her earliest memories was hearing anti-slavery lecturer
222:, which at the time, was the only published history of the Shaker movement written by one of its members. The book joined Shaker principles and socially progressive values such as women's equality.
166:'s North Family at 18 years old in 1849. Joining the Shakers alienated both of them from the rest of the family, with a rich uncle even threatening to dis-inherent her of
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Religious leaders of
America : a biographical guide to founders and leaders of religious bodies, churches, and spiritual groups in North America
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speak, but she was disturbed when Mott was "abruptly silenced by the guardians of Quaker orthodoxy." She went to a Quaker school in
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Andrews, Edward Deming (1971). James, Edward T.; James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S. (eds.).
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White was an active advocate for social reform and pacifism. She wrote in support of
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A memorial to
Eldress Anna White, and Elder Daniel Offord
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Towards the end of her life, White became interested in
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391:. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. p. 188.
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430:. Mount Lebanon, N.Y.: North Family of Shakers.
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209:National American Woman Suffrage Association
127:, social reformer, author, and hymn writer.
315:. Detroit, MI: Gale Research. p. 598.
120:(21 January 1831 β 16 December 1910) was a
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403:"Anna White, Shaker Elderess, Dead"
216:Shakerism: Its Meaning and Message
110:Shakerism: Its Meaning and Message
16:Shaker eldress and social reformer
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510:Suffragists from New York (state)
455:People from New Lebanon, New York
505:Historians from New York (state)
232:White died on 16 December 1910.
154:White became interested in the
490:American Christian hymnwriters
266:. American National Biography.
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388:Chronology of women's history
171:female visitors and guests.
164:Mount Lebanon Shaker Society
90:Mount Lebanon Shaker Society
480:Historical preservationists
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495:American women hymnwriters
309:Melton, J. Gordon (1999).
485:American women historians
424:Taylor, Leila S. (1912).
289:"White, Anna (1831β1910)"
205:National Council of Women
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470:Female religious leaders
158:after her father joined
385:Olsen, Kirstin (1994).
373:White, Anna (1831-1910)
214:In 1904, White cowrote
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160:Hancock Shaker Village
149:Poughkeepsie, New York
192:Universal Peace Union
70:New Lebanon, New York
203:Women for Peace and
135:Anna White born in
475:American feminists
407:The New York Times
200:Theodore Roosevelt
88:Shaker Eldress at
52:Brooklyn, New York
227:Christian Science
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96:Years active
62:December 16, 1910
48:January 21, 1831.
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264:White, Anna
186:during the
77:Nationality
439:Categories
236:References
168:US$ 40,000
118:Anna White
85:Occupation
44:1831-01-21
23:Anna White
196:The Hague
131:Biography
99:1865-1910
141:New York
137:Brooklyn
80:American
156:Shakers
125:Eldress
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122:Shaker
317:ISBN
59:Died
38:Born
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