The Quaker Moons of Lancashire

Taylorian, Brandon Reece orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-2632-5642 (2024) The Quaker Moons of Lancashire. Quaker History, 113 (2). pp. 72-93. ISSN 0033-5053

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Official URL: https://muse.jhu.edu/journal/394

Abstract

In April 1658, a Lancastrian currier named John Moon claimed to receive a revelation from Jesus Christ that affirmed many tenets taught by the English Dissenter George Fox. Moon, along with his parents, brother and uncle, joined the Religious Society of Friends in 1653, a year after Fox’s vision on Pendle Hill, not far from the Moon’s homeland on the plains of the Fylde. This portion of the Moon family received instant reprisal for converting to the new movement. However, imprisonments, fines and the seizure of his possessions did not stop John from publishing several works affirming his newfound beliefs. Still, scholars remain in dispute over parts of the history of the Moon family’s conversion. This article investigates the early history of Quakerism in Lancashire with special attention given to John Moon’s literary works which may warrant his recognition as a Quaker leader key to the propagation of the movement.


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