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Joseph John Gurney

Joseph John Gurney (1788–1847) was an English preacher, banker, and influential evangelical Quaker whose ministry and writings significantly shaped the Religious Society of Friends in the 19th century. Born on August 2, 1788, at Earlham Hall near Norwich, he was the tenth child of John Gurney, a prominent Quaker banker, and Catherine Bell. Raised in a devout Quaker family—his sister Elizabeth Fry became a famed prison reformer and his brother-in-law Thomas Fowell Buxton an anti-slavery campaigner—Gurney was educated privately at Oxford by a tutor, as Quakers were barred from university matriculation. In 1818, he was recorded as a Quaker minister, dedicating himself to preaching and social reform. He married Jane Birkbeck in 1817, who died in 1822, leaving two children; he later married Mary Fowler in 1827, with whom he had two more children, and after her death in 1835, wed Eliza Paul Kirkbride in 1841. Gurney’s preaching career was marked by his evangelical fervor, which sparked both revival and division among Quakers. From 1837 to 1840, he traveled across North America and the West Indies, preaching against slavery, capital punishment, and war, notably addressing U.S. Congress members in 1837 in Legislative Hall. His emphasis on scriptural authority and salvation through faith in Christ—articulated in works like Observations on the Religious Peculiarities of the Society of Friends (1824)—contrasted with traditional Quaker quietism, leading to the 1840s Gurneyite-Wilburite schism in America. A prolific author of over 80 works, including Essays on the Evidences, Doctrines and Practical Operations of Christianity (1825), he also co-authored prison reform studies with Elizabeth Fry. Gurney died on January 4, 1847, at Earlham Hall, leaving a legacy as a preacher whose evangelical theology and humanitarian efforts reshaped Quakerism and bolstered social justice causes.