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Hannah More

Hannah More (February 2, 1745 – September 7, 1833) was an English religious writer, educator, and philanthropist whose ministry through pen and deed shaped evangelical Christianity and social reform in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Born in Fishponds, near Bristol, England, to Jacob More, a schoolmaster, and Mary Grace Lynes, she was the fourth of five daughters in a modest family. Educated initially by her father and later at a girls’ school her sister Mary founded in Bristol in 1758—where she became a teacher at 17—More developed a literary talent, writing her first play, The Search After Happiness, in 1762. More’s preaching career unfolded not from a pulpit but through her influential writings and educational efforts, beginning with London theater success in the 1770s—plays like Percy (1777) produced by David Garrick—before a deepening faith in the 1780s shifted her focus. Joining the evangelical Clapham Sect with figures like William Wilberforce, she wrote tracts like Village Politics (1793) and Cheap Repository Tracts (1795–1797) to counter revolutionary ideas and uplift the poor, alongside Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education (1799) advocating for women’s moral education. She established Sunday schools across Somerset’s Mendip Hills, educating thousands despite opposition. Never married—her engagement to William Turner ended in 1773, granting her financial independence—she passed away at age 88 in Clifton, Bristol.