The Society for the Promotion of Permanent …

Years: 1816 - 1816
June
The Society for the Promotion of Permanent and Universal Peace, founded on June 14, 1816, in London, advocates a gradual, proportionate, and simultaneous disarmament of all nations and the principle of arbitration.

The founding dozen are:

    William Allen (Quaker philanthropist, chemist)
    John Clarkson (abolitionist, founding father of Sierra Leone)
    Thomas Clarkson (abolitionist and campaigner)
    William Crawford (prison reformer; 1788-1847)
    Charles Stokes Dudley, active in the British and Foreign Bible Society
    Rev. Thomas Harper (1762-1832; (Obituary in The Herald of Peace 1831, p. 528)
    Robert Marsden (1769/70- 1847)
    Joseph Tregellan Price
    Evan Rees (1790-1821), businessman
    John Scott (banker, author of the Society's second tract: 'War Inconsistent with the Doctrine and Example of Christ', originally published 1796)
    Frederick Smith (1757-1823), chemist and druggist
    Thomas Sturge the elder (1749-1825), Quaker businessman and philanthropist

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