Online Encyclopedia

ELIAS HICKS (1748-1830)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 448 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELIAS HICKS (1748-1830)  ,
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American Quaker, was born in Hempstead township, Long Island, on the 19th of March 1748 . His parents were Friends, but he took little
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interest in religion until he was about twenty; soon after that time he gave up the carpenter's trade, to which he had been apprenticed when seventeen, and became a farmer . By 1775 he had " openings leading to the
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ministry " and was " deeply engaged for the right administration of discipline and order in the church," and in 1779 he first set out on his itinerant preaching
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tours between
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Vermont and
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Maryland . He attacked
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slavery, even when preaching in Maryland; wrote Observations on the Slavery of the Africans and their Descendants (1811); and was influential in procuring the passage (in 1817) of the act declaring
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free after 1827 all negroes born in New York and not freed by the Act of 1799 .. He died at Jericho, Long Island, on the 27th of
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February 1830 . His preaching was
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practical rather than doctrinal and he was heartily opposed to any set creed; hence his successful opposition at the Baltimore yearly meeting of 1817 to the proposed creed which would make the Society in
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America approach the position of the
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English Friends by definite doctrinal statements . His Doctrinal
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Epistle (1824) stated his position, and a break ensued in 1827-1828, Hicks's followers, who call themselves the " Liberal Branch," being called " Hicksites " by the " Orthodox " party, which they for a time outnumbered . The
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village of Hicksville, in
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Nassau County, New York, 15 m . E. of
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Jamaica, lies in the centre of the Quaker
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district of Long Island and was named in honour of Elias Hicks . See A Series of Extemporaneous Discourses ... by Elias Hicks (
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Philadelphia, 1825) ; The Journal of the
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Life and Labors of Elias Hicks (Philadelphia, 1828), and his Letters (Philadelphia, 1834) .

End of Article: ELIAS HICKS (1748-1830)
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