About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia. Pages: 44. Chapters: Abney Park, Alternatives to Violence Project, Amesbury Friends Meeting House, Baltimore Yearly Meeting, Beanite Quakerism, Benjaminville Friends Meeting House and Burial Ground, Brynmawr Experiment, Camp NeeKauNis, Canadian Yearly Meeting, Catoctin Quaker Camp, Clearness committee, Clerk, Continuous revelation, Farm and Wilderness Camps, Fifty nine Particulars laid down for the Regulating things, Firbank Fell, Friendly Adult Presence, Friends Committee on Scouting, Friends meeting house, Holy Experiment, Inner light, Ireland Yearly Meeting, John Bowne House, Junior Yearly Meeting, Junior Young Friends, List of Quaker businesses, Monthly meeting, New England Yearly Meeting, Nontheist Friend, Northern Yearly Meeting, Pardshaw Young Friends' Centre, Peace Testimony, Pendle Hill, Pendle Hill Quaker Center for Study and Contemplation, Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, Quaker Bible, Quaker Faith and Practice, Quaker history, Quaker views of women, Quakers in Latin America, Quakers in North America, Quakers in the Abolition Movement, Quaking Houses, Query, Richmond Declaration, Seneca Falls Convention, Shakers, Swarthmoor Hall, Te Hahi Tuhauwiri, Testimony of Equality, Testimony of Integrity, Testimony of Simplicity, Third Haven Meeting House, Upper Dublin Friends Meeting House, Valiant Sixty, What Canst Thou Say, Wink, World Gathering of Young Friends, Yearly Meeting, Young Quaker. Excerpt: The historic grounds of Abney Park are situated in Congregationalist'), Dr Isaac Watts, and the neighbouring Hartopp family who leased the eastern part of the park from Lady Abney. In the early 17th century, Lady Mary Abney's park was accessed via the frontages and gardens of two large mansions on her estate - her own manor house (Abney House), and the neighbouring Fleetwood House and its detached Summerhouse. Both mansions fronted onto Church Street in the quiet Dr Isaac Watts and Cedar of Lebanon tree had already taken p...