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despite being over a decade older than him. They had two daughters and Anne supported her husband in his preaching rather than preaching herself. She had to run the household whilst he was imprisoned for his beliefs. Anne's reduction in her preaching is thought to mirror the changing role of women
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within the
Quakers. Frequently quiet, Anne reacted when she heard of opposition to Quaker women having meetings and the women Quakers in Kendal wrote letters in protest to the views of John Wilkinson and John Story.
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Anne married John
Audland and they were both preachers for the Quaker cause from their conversion in 1652. Anne travelled throughout Yorkshire, Oxfordshire, Leicestershire and Derbyshire advocating the views of
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two years later. Anne travelled without her husband so that she could avoid the distraction of pregnancies that might interfere with her work.
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Trevett, Christine (2014) "Anne Camm and the
Vanishing Quaker Prophets," Quaker Studies: Vol. 3: Iss. 2, Article 1. Available at:
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Caroline L. Leachman, ‘Camm , Anne (1627–1705)’, Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
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In 1664 she gave birth to a son a fortnight after the death of her first husband. After this she married
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in 1627. She became inspired by religion during a stay in London with her aunt for seven years.
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http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/quakerstudies/vol3/iss2/1
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86:preacher.
76:Anne Camm
69:(m. 1666)
61:Spouse(s)
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84:Quaker
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80:Newby
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