Fotografía de autor

Margaret Hope Bacon (1921–2011)

Autor de The Quiet Rebels: The Story of the Quakers in America

29+ Obras 1,224 Miembros 34 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Margaret Hope Bacon, author and lecturer is a Swarthmore College Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters. The city of Philadelphia has honored her with both a Human Rights Award in 1976 and a Citation for Contributions to Women's History in 1987.

Obras de Margaret Hope Bacon

The back bench : a novel (2007) 65 copias
Love Is the Hardest Lesson (1999) 54 copias
Year of Grace (2002) 47 copias

Obras relacionadas

Friends for 300 years (1952)algunas ediciones461 copias
America's Alternative Religions (1995) — Contribuidor — 57 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1921-04-07
Fecha de fallecimiento
2011-02-24
Lugar de sepultura
Friends Southwestern Burial Ground, Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, USA
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
New York, New York, USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, USA
Lugares de residencia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Educación
Antioch College
Ocupaciones
biographer
journalist
historian
memoirist
novelist
Organizaciones
Pennsylvania Abolition Society
Biografía breve
Margaret Hope Bacon, née Borchardt, was born in New York City. Her father was an artist and she attended progressive schools. She earned a bachelor's degree in 1943 at Antioch College in Ohio, where she met her future husband, S. Allen Bacon. After the couple married and had three children, she wrote freelance articles for national magazines such as Parents and Good Housekeeping. She joined the Society of Friends -- known as Quakers -- in 1950 and worked as assistant director of information services for the American Friends Service Committee for 22 years. From 1969 through 2007, she wrote more than a dozen fiction and nonfiction works, many of them biographies about leading Quakers. Among her most popular books were The Quiet Rebels: The Story of Quakers in America (1969) and Valiant Friend: The Life of Lucretia Mott (1980). Her memoir, Love Is the Hardest Lesson, was published in 1999. She was a longtime trustee and vice president of the Pennsylvania Abolition Society.

Miembros

Reseñas

A balanced and valuable survey of women and the politics of peace since the beginning of the nineteenth century.
 
Denunciada
PendleHillLibrary | 2 reseñas más. | Nov 8, 2022 |
An account of a Quaker grandmother who at 76 learns she has a year left to live. In the unlikely setting of a winterized summer cabin, coping with bodily weakness and pain, Faith weaves her year of grace into a rich tapestry of local activism and extended family togetherness as she minds the light and mends the world right up to the end.
 
Denunciada
PendleHillLibrary | 3 reseñas más. | Aug 17, 2022 |
Wilt Thou Go on My Errand? offers the journals of three traveling Quaker women of the eighteenth century – Susanna Morris, Elizabeth Hudson, and Ann Moore.
 
Denunciada
PendleHillLibrary | otra reseña | May 16, 2022 |
The author gives us a vivid account of her experience working in a state psychiatric institution as the young wife of a conscientious objector during World War II. She portrays the insulated and dehumanizing world of Sykesville, where patients lost their individuality and caregivers behaved abusively from their own fear. The tale reminds us of our own vulnerabilities as as of the critical importance of community-based mental health treatment. Her personal story movingly illustrates the transformative power of love which casts out fear and restores to others their sense of humanity.… (más)
 
Denunciada
PendleHillLibrary | 3 reseñas más. | May 15, 2022 |

Premios

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Estadísticas

Obras
29
También por
3
Miembros
1,224
Popularidad
#20,980
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
34
ISBNs
33

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