Showing posts with label Japan Quaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan Quaker. Show all posts

2021/08/06

1973 A Tribute to Howard H. Brinton

 July 1/15, 1973 FRIENDS JOURNAL

Quaker Thought and Life Today

Contents

Quaker Sociology—Robert F. Tatman 356

A Tribute to Howard H. Brinton—Elizabeth Gray Vining, Wilson, Philip H. Wells, Elizabeth Brinton,

Edwin B. Bronner and Douglas Steere 357

Bicentennial of Luke Howard—Nuts' and Their 365

There Was an Old Man with a Beard—Noah Vail 365

On the Essential Differences Between Friends—R. W. Tucker,

Tom Abrams 166

Poetry by Richard F. Tirk, Jack Too'1l and PoU van no Sedz jot

Reviews of Hooks 369

Letters to the Editor 170

Friends Around the World. 173

Reports by Rosemary M. Elliott and Robert A. Martin, Jr.

Announcements and Coming Events 376

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July 1/15, 1973 FRIENDS JOURNAL


The First Word The Darkness of Watergate;

The Light of Howard Brinton

MY READING MATERIAL and therefore my thoughts have been dominated recently by two Quakers. One of them, Howard Brinton, is physically dead but spiritually he will live forever through the impact of his light-filled, illum­inating life. Some reflections by others about that life are shared with readers in this issue of the Journal.

To me, some of the clearest of Howard Brinton's in­sights are in Quaker Education in Theory and Practice, a Pendle Hill pamphlet first published in 1940, and re­printed every nine years since. Particularly timely are some of his views on democracy. "A democratic society in order to function," he said, "must respect human per­sonality as sacred, inviolable and capable of genuine self-sacrifice. These are Christian doctrines. Democracy can­not work merely on a basis of sweet reasonableness and a general pooling of self-interests. There is no such thing as a successful secular democracy. English democracy was born out of the struggle for religious freedom in the seven­teenth century. The American democracy was founded by persons who came out of that struggle and who did not distinguish between their religion and their democracy."

I came across those words while reading and thinking about another, even more immortal Quaker, Richard Nixon. As Watergate deepened and became murkier, Howard Brinton's words, written more than three decades earlier, continued to shed light on this latest example of just how far America has come since it was founded.

"As long," Howard had said, "as we can draw on the accumulated reserve of Christian power stored up during an intensely religious era, so long will our American democracy prove workable. Only religion can overcome selfishness sufficiently to enable men and women to work together without compulsion . . . (Yet) it will be truly said that there is a power other than religion which en­ables men to work together with sufficient unselfishness to create a cooperative society. That power is patriotism

But patriotism is more likely in the long run to lead toward authoritarianism than toward democracy . . . there is a Higher Power than the state which can and will judge . .

Elsewhere, he also said true peacemaking was "a positive power by which an inner appeal is made to the best that is in man, rather than as an external pressure by forces from outside him."

As I read those words by one Quaker and compared them with the actions of the other one, it was all too sadly obvious how much closer to Richard Nixon and to Water­gate than to Howard Brinton and to Pendle Hill the American way of life really is in 1973.

The dollar and what it can do, not human personality, is sacred in modern America. As a result, there is ab­solutely nothing inviolable. Self-sacrifice is rare; self‑

FRIENDS JOURNAL July 1/15, 1973

service is much more common. The basic power of our national policy is negative, not positive, and with few ex­ceptions, it is the worst in man, not the best, to which America appeals. When these appeals not surprisingly fail to meet the needs of developing peoples, external pressure is applied through political, economic and, if need be, military forces.

And religion essentially has absolutely nothing to do with the process by which national decisions are made. That is how far we have come from the days when America was founded by persons "who did not distinguish between their religion and their democracy."

And we can't blame Richard Nixon for that. Instead, I suggest that we Americans, especially we "religious" Americans and particularly we American Quakers, take a long look at ourselves and ask some hard questions. How sacred do we consider each human personality? How capable are we of genuine self-sacrifice? How closely do we relate religion to not just democracy but our entire way of life? And do we indeed "appeal to the best that is in man?"

If even a few of us would consistently ask these ques­tions of ourselves and then try to honestly answer them in and through our own lives, religion would begin to be­come alive and well in America, rather than continue in its insipid and irrelevant way. But because we are not consistent and honest, we must share in the darkness of Watergate even as we share in the light of Howard Brin‑

ton that continues to point toward a better way. JDL

Shortly after the above was written, Martha Dart shared with us what she called "a poem-prayer-hymn" by G. K. Chesterton that had been read at the General Conference of Friends in India in early May. It seems, Martha said, to speak very clearly to the United States at the moment." It does, indeed.

o God of earth and altar,

Bow down and hear our cry;

Our earthly rulers falter,

Our people drift and die;

The walls of gold entomb us,

The swords of scorn divide;

Take not thy thunder from us,

But take away our pride.

From all that terror teaches,

From lies of tongue and pen;

From all the easy speeches

That comfort cruel men;

From sale and profanation

Of honor and the sword;

From sleep and from damnation,

Deliver us, good Lord!

Tie in a living tether

The priest and prince and thrall;

Bind all our lives together,

Smite us and save us all;

In ire and exultation

Aflame with faith, and free,

Lift up a living nation,

A single sword to Thee.

355

Quaker Sociology

by Robert F. Tatman

HAVE YOU EVER PLAYED "Quaker Sociology"? The rules are simple: list all the different Friends you can, and classify them according to their various characteristics. It's fun, and any number can play—(even attenders.)

First there are the Spirtual Friends. For them, the worship experience is paramount. They are usually some‑

what confused by and sometimes contemptuous of those

Friends who prefer to work in the world. There arc many different kinds of Spiritual Friends: the Children of Fox,

who see themselves as rekindling the spark of Original

Quakerism; the Oriental Friends, who discipline them­selves with yoga or Transcendental Meditation and who

sit in meeting meditating on the Whichness of What; the Philosophes, who spin marvelous webs of airy logic on the slim base of a split hair; the Biblical Friends, who know their Bible inside and out, backwards and forwards, and who are always ready with an apropos quote.

No Spiritual Friend, of course, can get along with the Activist Friends. These are the ones who see the meeting

for worship as a waste of precious time, choosing instead

to seek God on the picket line or in prison. Their mission is to Save the World, and they go about it relentlessly—

and God help any Friends who don't drop what they're

doing and follow them. Here, too, there are many different types: the Nonviolent Sociologists, whose woridview is

expressed in a scenario and who are forever running

situation analyses and scaling options to determine whether an action would be counterproductive (tactically speaking,

of course); the Politically Active Friends, usually liberal

Democrats, who like the American Way of Doing Things and who would like it better if they were running it; the

Friends With a Helping Hand, who collect old clothes and canned goods for the Poor People in the Ghetto, and who look forward to the one day a year when the Poor People come out to meeting for worship and a nice pot-Luck; the Communal Friends, who live in (what else?)

communes, sharing all the work and the child care and the vegetarian meals (for Communal Friends never eat

meat). Everyone, they say, should be a Communal Friend, because it's radical, ecologically sound, cheap, and healthy (not necessarily in that order; cheap usually goes first).

Then there are the Historical Friends. These are the ones of impeccable pedigree. Their ancestors were con‑

vinced by George Fox or Margaret Fell, and while maybe

those ancestors were poor working folk, you sure couldn't tell it by looking at their descendants. Their main interests

lie in maintaining old buildings and old records, so that everyone can know that their pedigrees are impeccable, and that their ancestors were convinced by George Fox or Margaret Fell .

And we can't forget the Committed Friends. (This is

Robert F. Tatman, a member of Merion, PA, Meetings, works with the Philadelphia Fellowship Commission.

not to say that the other Friends aren't committed, but these Friends are COMMITTED.) Simply defined, a Committed Friend is one who serves on so many com­mittees that he or she (usually she; Quaker committees are mostly female in membership and mostly male in leadership) runs the serious risk of being "committeed to death." The Society of Friends couldn't function without them. In a very real sense, they are the Society of Friends, for no one else ever comes to meetings. Of course it isn't really possible to divide up Friends—or any group—so neatly, although the temptation to do so is very strong. Most of you will have recognized your­selves in more than one of the categories, and others will have occured to you. Go ahead and make your own contributions to Quaker Sociology. As you do, you will realize that all of these Friends need nurturing. All of them need encouraging. All of them need each other, for they are all necessary to the life of the Society of Friends.

The Society of Friends is remarkably diverse. I seriously doubt that anyone can spell out all the ways Quakers take action. Yet all of us—Spiritual and Acitivist, His­torical and Committed—find our great strength in the direct and personal experience of God that lies at the heart of Quakerism. Just as American society as a whole is grappling with the question of pluralism, so is the Society of Friends. And perhaps—just perhaps—we are a little further along on the way to understanding what true pluralism means. One way to understand the diversity and beauty of Quakerism is to engage in this little game called Quaker Sociology. Once we Friends come to under­stand and appreciate the full spectrum of religious ex­perience in our Society, we will have begun the more difficult task of understanding and appreciating the full spectrum of cultural and political experience in the nation at large.

James Nayler Entering London

No, no, he had not thought himself to be the Christ of the Gospels; no, he had not thought London to be Jerusalem.

Then why, Friend James,

did you ride a donkey into London town? The Anglicans and Presbyterians laugh.

Confused, James Nay/er bowed his head and begged

forgiveness of the Society of Friends.

And then in him the inner Light burned low

which was his passion, utter and entire.

Could the Light betray him? Or betray Itself?

The vessel was insufficient for that Light;

his doubt and theirs would now turn down the wick.

Gentle my reader, do not pause to examine the wording incidental to this recital.

Mount your white donkey and set out straightway for a thousand Jerusalems plotting crucifixion.

JACK TOOTELL

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HOWARD H. BRINTON 1884-1973 through whom the Light shone."


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Surrounded and Lifted Up

by Elizabeth Gray Vining

Image

DURING the Christmas holidays in 1936 at a Meeting Workers Institute at Pendle Hill, I met Howard Brinton for the first time. The seeds of all my later knowledge of him were there in that week.

I was a recently convinced Friend and I had just dis­covered the mystics. Howard Brinton and also Rufus Jones, though briefly at that institute, were to illumine both Quakerism and mysticism for me and to show me how they fitted together.

At that time Howard gave a series of lectures on the sources of Quakerism, which he traced not only to John and Paul, the great European mystics and spiritual re­formers, but also to the religions of the Orient. He had spent the previous spring and summer in China and Japan, where he talked with the great roshis and meditated with the monks at a temple in Kyoto. For the first time I heard of Zen.

Howard Brinton in 1936 already had the aureole of white hair that distinguished him to the last, a face luminous with wisdom and serenity and the unselfconscious simplicity that is the mark of the best mystics. He had, too, the mystic's fellowship with animals, although it was not till later that he came to meeting for worship with a baby rabbit in his pocket. His sense of fun surprised and delighted me when I saw him take part in the skits and songs of Log Night at the end of our week of study and worship. I did not then understand the deeper significance of Log Night: how by laughing at itself Pendle Hill seeks to produce not fanatics sure of their rightness but "humble truth-seekers who do not take themselves too seriously."

In 1969 and 1970 1 taught a course at Pendle Hill, which I called "Certain Mystics", in which I included both Rufus Jones and Howard Brinton, Before I lectured on Howard 1 had a long and memorable talk with him about his life and thought. There is room for only a highlight or two. His first piece of writing, at the age of twelve or thereabouts, was a collection of original poems entitled Extracts from the Thought of Howard H. Brinton. Studying under Rufus Jones at Haverford, he was led to Jakob Boehme who, he said, was his "favorite mystic, for he showed how to combine the affirmative and the negative ways." His comment on the six years he spent teaching at Pickering College, Ontario, was a rueful "I think I was just the same when I left there as I was when I went there." His work for the American Friends Service Committee in Germany provided him with a car to drive and a chance to take lovely young Anna Cox through the Riesengeberge to visit Boehme's grave.

He took his Ph.D. in physics and philosophy and his thesis on Jakob Boehme was later published as a hook, The Mystic Will. At Earlham he taught physics, but when he and Anna Cox Brinton went to Mills College, he taught religion and philosophy. "I thought there was plenty of physics in the world but not enough religion."

Howard and Yuki plant a tree. Photograph by Brad Nichols

The Mystic Will was followed by a distinguished list of books and pamphlets, chiefly on Quakerism. His last four pamphlets, soon to be published in book form with the title, The Philosophy of Quakerism, were written when he could no longer see to reread the sources he knew so well. The unique character of Howard Brinton's work on Quakerism lies to some extent in his sources: the little-read Epistles of George Fox and some three hundred Quaker journals. Over a period of years he and Anna Brinton together made an exhaustive study of the journals. He saw their Quakerism as mystical, with other elements.

"Quakerism," he wrote in Ethical Mysticism, "is de­rived from the ethical teachings of Jesus, the Christ-mysticism of Paul and the Logos- and God-mysticism of John." He defined mysticism many times, but perhaps his simplest definition is in Friends for Three Hundred Years: "a religion based on the spiritual search for an inward, immediate experience of the divine. . . . Quakerism is peculiar in being a group mysticism, grounded in Christian concepts." "By ethical mysticism," he explained, "I mean that type of mysticism which first withdraws from the world revealed by the senses to the inward Divine Source of Light, Truth and Power, and then returns to the world with strength renewed, insight cleared, and desire quickened to bind all life together in the bonds of love."

There are no spiritual ladders or stages to be found in Howard Brinton's mysticism, nor is the mystical journey mapped. But he does write of aridity and he does give advice as to how to meet what he calls "the dark forces of the soul." They "cannot be removed by direct attack. To fight them is to give them the only strength they can possess . . . It is not through a struggle to possess the Light but rather by permitting the Light to possess us

35 July 1/15, 1973 FRIENDS JOURNAL

that inner darkness is overcome." (The Quaker Doctrine of Inner Peace) He was very sure that insights received in retirement were to be carried out in service to others. "The negative journey to the Light was always followed by the positive journey to the needy but good world." (Friends for Three Hundred Years) And again, "A religion is better understood by what it does than by what it thinks."

Though Howard Brinton wrote about mysticism with the authority of direct knowledge, there are in his books no accounts of his own experiences. He was reticent about himself. But in his later years he did say to Dan Wilson that perhaps he should have revealed himself more, and he did tell me one afternoon, sitting in his

through whom the Light shone.

garden while students who had come to his regular Tues­day afternoon lecture drank tea all around us, of an ex­perience he had had in England.

"Do you know Glastonbury Tor? It stands up high—the ancient Isle of Avalon above what used to be a marsh. I climbed up there once years ago--it's quite a climb—and when I got to the top I had the most impressive ex­perience of my life. I felt surrounded and lifted up."

In his last years, after Anna Brinton's death, he used to come with Yuki Brinton's help, leaning on two sticks, to meeting for worship in the Barn at Pendle Hill. I see him now: with his white hair and frail, spare body, he was like a beautiful, translucent shell through which the Light shone.

Great and Humble Teacher, Warm Friend and Wise Counselor

I REMEMBER seeing him for the first time in the autumn of 1937. It was at the morning meeting for worship in the Pendle Hill Barn. Only during the previous summer had I discovered the Religious Society of Friends while serving in the American Friends Service Committee's Peace Caravan program. My literary introduction to the Quaker way of worshiping had come through reading his Swarthmore Lecture, Creative Worship. Though the meet­ing room was filled that morning with the Pendle Hill family, plus us sojourners for a peaceworkers roundup, my eyes were drawn at once to the man who had to be the author of that deeply convincing book. There he sat, back straight, head lifted, eminent eyebrows crowning closed eyes. He appeared to be listening, unafraid for whatever truth was to come purely out of the quiet. When he spoke, simply, briefly, clearly, I felt we were in the presence of a Friend, authentic as his writing. Quoting from Pascal's Pensées, "When we encounter a natural style we are always astonished and delighted, for we ex­pected to see an author, and found a man."

During his nearly forty years at Pendle Hill, Howard Brinton came to be known by seekers from around the world as a teacher of the religion he lived. Characteristics of the Quaker Journalists, whose religion he was so de­voted to portraying in contemporary terms, were pre­dominantly his own as well. Though he didn't keep a Journal, as such, I believe Pendle Hill has been his living autobiography.

He lived as simply as he spoke. In younger years he had worked as skillfully with his hands as with his mind; in later years he expressed wonder that he hadn't followed the way of the manual more than of the intellectual.

He could laugh and play heartily, as evidenced par­ticularly at Hallowe'en parties, Pendle Hill log nights, and with his grandchildren. Children and animals always seemed to feel at ease with him, and he with them. Never to be forgotten were the joyous family reunions, with Howard, Anna, their four children, spouses, and all six­teen grandchildren overflowing that humble little cottage, to which Howard and Anna had retired from Upmeads, in 1952. They had named it Matsudo (translated "Pine

FRIENDS JOURNAL July 1/15, 1973 by Dan Wilson

Door"), and had lived there for the rest of Anna's life; Howard's, too, except for his last few months. He and Yuki Takahashi Brinton had moved recently into one of the new apartments to make way for a new highway, the "Blue Route."

Mats udo had provided a special treat, once each week, tea being served by Anna before Howard's lectures there. How like them to take, in their usual unruffled stride, the awful announcement, some years ago now, that the high­way was to come right up to the front door. Anna had commented, "We'll use the back door," and Howard, "We'll not be living to see it."

In his presence could be felt the unusual degree to which he had been blessed with the inward peace, reverenced

He could laugh and play heartily. Photograph by Takao Akiyama

Image

HOWARD H. SRINTON 1554-197'

by him both as end and means, though in his modest way during one of our last visits, he commented, sadly, "I should have been less preoccupied with watching my mind. I could have revealed more, the depths of feeling in my heart."

Throughout my own twenty years of sitting almost daily with him, in the Pendle Hill meeting for worship, I knew him as a great and humble teacher, warm friend and wise counselor.

The Father of Pacific

by Phillihp H. Wells

HOWARD BRINTON has often been spoken of affectionately as the father of Pacific Yearly Meeting. During one yearly meeting at St. Mary's College I was sitting next to one of the Christian Brothers when Howard was introduced to make some remarks from the platform. Brother Girard leaned over and asked me, "Is he your pope?" Throughout the life of the yearly meeting he was an active par­ticipant, being present often, especially in the last ten years when he attended almost every year. While he never served in any office, he participated fully in the sessions.

Howard and Ann Brinton came to Mills College to teach in 1928 and stayed until 1936 when they became directors of Pendle Hill. They participated in Berkeley Meeting and the College Park Association, which in­cluded the Friends meetings in the San Francisco Bay area. In April, 1931 they called together Friends and friends of Friends from California, Oregon and Washing­ton for a two-day meeting at their home in Oakland. At that meeting the Pacific Coast Association of Friends, forerunner of Pacific Yearly Meeting, was formed. Howard also was the first editor of the Association's Friends Bul­letin, and the earliest issues were mostly his writing.

Even after Howard and Anna moved to Pendle Hill they continued to be interested in Friends on the West Coast. In the early 40's the number of Friends and Friends meetings in the West had increased, and there was a greatly felt need to unite them in a yearly meeting. Howard was always ready with wise counsel. It had been many, many years since a yearly meeting had been set up independently and not by an existing yearly meeting. Some Friends in the American Friends Fellowship Coun­cil (later the American Section of the World Committee) were very doubtful. Rufus Jones was especially con­cerned that we might offend California and Oregon Yearly Meetings of Friends Church. Howard labored with them patiently and helped us in our contacts with them until they all felt easy. Neither yearly meeting was troubled by the appearance of a new yearly meeting uniting the in­dependent unprogramed Western meetings.

In August of 1946 at a meeting of the Pacific Coast Association in Pasadena, attended by Howard and Anna Brinton, a yearly meeting was decided upon and the usual officers were appointed. The f011owing August we met at Palo Alto as the first session of Pacific Yearly Meeting. The Pasadena meeting had been especially enriched by

Image

Photograph by David I. Russell

Hoard and Anna at Pacific Yearly Meeting, 1968

an education conference held just before it, at which Howard was the resource leader. Howard also helped by directing Friends in Victoria, Vancouver and Mexico City to Pacific Yearly Meeting, so that we became an interna­tional yearly meeting.

During the 1950's, other concerns kept the Brintons from attending yearly meeting, but as Howard and Anna grew older they gradually became more regular attenders, partly because they could also visit their son, Edward, his wife, Desiree, and the grandchildren at La Jolla. It thus became a special dividend at yearly meeting to see and hear Howard and Anna as they spoke to the business of the meeting.

After Anna's death his devotion to the yearly meeting did not waver. He came to the 1971 session at McMinn­ville, Oregon, with a special concern to help Friends more clearly understand Quaker theology and its foundations in the writings of John. His enthusiasm sparked a renewed interest in the study of John and the Bible in many monthly meetings.

Yuki came with him and cared for him so carefully that he was able to be quite active. And again last year he and Yuki came to yearly meeting. Although he was feeble, his spirit pervaded the gathering. He was alert to all that went on, and he gave his approval to the next steps of growth that saw the grouping formed in his home 41 years before divide into three yearly meetings now. Who can foresee how much growth will eventually take place?

During all these years, the presence and writings of Howard Brinton have been a unifying and insipiring in­fluence for Friends everywhere, but particularly for us in the Pacific Coast region.

360 July 1/15, 1973 FRIENDS JOURNAL

through ,vho, the tigk

Family Occasions: Memories That Linger On

by Elizabeth Brinton

IT WAS NOVEMBER, and a familiar voice on the phone said "Of course we want everyone again this year." And so brothers, sisters, children, grandchildren and cousins of assorted ages would be gathering for another Thanks­giving dinner in Howard and Anna Brinton's home at Pendle Hill.

When our parents were no longer living, Howard's strong feeling for family solidarity, his real interest in each individual member, as well as his cordial invitations (backed wholeheartedly by Anna) made their home the natural gathering place for our particular branch of the Brinton family.

Howard was the oldest of our generation, but as the family gathered around the dinner table, his were the jokes we enjoyed the most, his stories the ones asked for year after year. Who among us will ever forget his ac­count of attending a very conservative meeting in the Middle West, years ago, and being preached at because he was wearing a necktie and his suit coat had the con­ventional collar? Howard's imitation of the elderly Friend's quavering voice—to the last cadence-.--was perfect, and his grandchildren were as entertained as we were.

One of the Thanksgiving dinner pictures, taken some years ago, shows Howard holding out a plate well filled with turkey. It portrays his hospitable sharing of food but symbolically it speaks of other things he shared with us, over the years.

We all knew that he had spiritual depths and religious insights far beyond anything any one of us could attain. We looked up to him with respect for his towering intellect and his literary ability and appreciated the place of prominence he held in the Religious Society of Friends. In spite of his achievements, however, he never talked down to any of us and his quiet simplicity made us all feel at ease with him.

Howard's July birthday meant another family gather-ing—usually an outdoor picnic. Part of the fun, which he entered into wholeheartedly, was the "crowning" ceremony when some of his grandchildren placed a wreath on his head—a green wreath they had made of honey­suckle or some trailing vine. Before the picnic was half over, the wreath was always askew, usually caught in a bushy eyebrow, but he always wore it bravely to the end of the meal, much to everyone's delight.

One year, a very young grandchild gave him a birthday present of a ball of wire twisted into an odd, complicated

shape. His grandfather looked at it carefully and said in

the kindest voice, "Thank you very much, I never saw anything like that before." None of the rest of us had

either! Howard had told the exact truth and the giver of the gift ran away, pleased that something he had made for his grandfather had been so well received.

During his growing-up years in Chester County, Howard

FRIENDS JOURNAL July 1/15, 1973 Image

2021/08/05

LA Quaker: The Making of 20th century Quaker Peacemakers: Anna and Howard Brinton

LA Quaker: The Making of 20th century Quaker Peacemakers: Anna and Howard Brinton



The Making of 20th century Quaker Peacemakers: Anna and Howard Brinton

Howard and Anna were both deeply committed peacemakers whose example can teach us much today, as I show in my pamphlet "Living the Peace Testimony: the Legacy of Howard and Anna Brinton" (Pendle Hill, 2004). Both left the academic world to join the newly founded AFSC and do relief work after World War I. They served as volunteers, freely offering their talents as writers and organizers. Anna went to Breslau, the capitol of Lower Silesia, the southeastern part of Germany, where she became involved in the feeding program. It was there that Howard joined her. Their marriage resulted from their joint commitment to be peacemakers and relief workers.


Both remained committed to the AFSC and peacemaking throughout their lives. When Anna resigned as Administrative Director of Pendle Hill in 1949, she took a job with the AFSC international relations program. When Howard and Anna went to Japan in 1952-1954, they went as representatives of the AFSC and Pendle Hill.[1] Anna immediately became involved in the two relief centers run by Friends in Tokyo, Setagaya and Toyama Heights. Located in an old military barracks, Setagaya had been converted into housing for over a thousand families. The AFSC Neighborhood center at Toyama Heights was a childcare center. Anna was not only a frequent visitor to these centers, she also traveled to Korea to support AFSC’s program work there.


Because the Brintons had no set assignment, they felt free to do whatever they felt led to do. Howard gave talks in various parts of Japan on a wide variety of topics related to Quakerism. According to Howard, his “most important achievement in Japan was to assist a group of Nichiren monks to plan a world pacifist conference to be held at eight major cities in Japan. These monks had been bomber pilots. Their experiences as bomber pilots made them pacifists. Their leader, Nittatsu Fujii, had been in India and under the influence of Gandhi.”[2] Seven foreign Quakers attended, but none of the Christian missionaries. “Although themselves pacifists,” wrote Howard, “[these missionaries] apparently did not feel ready to work with Buddhists.”[3]

Interestingly, Howard was not able to secure support from the American Friends Service Committee for this venture because “they feared too much Communist influence.” According to Howard, the American embassy in Tokyo (no doubt under the influence of McCarthyism) had spread the word that the conference would be infiltrated by Communists.

In his first speech, Howard “tried to show that all the great religions in the world were pacifist at the beginning.” His address was mimeographed and circulated widely. The fourth and final meeting was held at Hiroshima. There he and the Mexican Quaker Herberto Sein lived in a home built by Floyd Schmoe (a Quaker pacifist and CO who built homes in areas of Hiroshima destroyed by the atomic bomb).[4] Over 80,000 people attended this final meeting and there was also an elaborate parade described in detail by Anna Brinton.[5]

Howard said that these meetings were interfered with by Communists only at the closing meeting in Tokyo. There two of the Communists, a Canadian missionary and a Buddhist monk from Ceylon, attacked the United States for using atomic weapons.

Howard also spoke out against the U.S. use of atomic weapons and was congratulated by the Japanese. “The Japanese had suffered so much that militarists were very unpopular and pacifists were welcome,” recalled Howard.

Howard’s awakening to pacifism took place in Europe after World War I. He saw Quakers as having an advantage over other religious groups because “the Society of Friends has come through the war with hands unstained by blood that sacrifices might be offered for the healing of the nations.”[6] He argued that Friends have an opportunity to make a difference in the world because they were not part of the war propaganda effort. “[Friends] have many times been able to do things impossible to a semi-official organization like the Red Cross. In Russia they have circulated freely among all factions. They have carried supplies across the barriers of hate within the old Austrian Empire, where others had failed.”[7] Howard called upon Friends to move beyond quietism into an active engagement with service and peace making.

As a Quaker, Howard had always supported the Peace Testimony as a personal witness, but in the aftermath of World War I he came to realize that another world war was inevitable unless Friends and others took positive action to promote peace. “To refuse to fight evil with evil is only the first mile,” wrote Howard. “The second is to overcome evil with good.”[8] While tutoring German students in Berlin, Howard discovered that many of them were learning English in order to prepare for the next war. They did not accept defeat. “What Hitler was to plan later,” recalled Howard, “was already having its beginnings in the minds of the students.[9] Howard’s response was to write an “Appeal to German Youth,” which was later published in the American Friend in the USA.[10]

In this essay, Howard took a philosophical view of developments in Germany. He told German students that one of Germany’s greatest periods of literature and philosophy occurred when Napoleon was sweeping over Europe and had conquered their country. Howard argued that the German idealists were instrumental in saving humanity from eighteenth-century rationalism and scientism. Kant’s great achievement was to use “the critical methods of the new science which threatened to destroy humanity’s faith in itself to build up that faith anew on a surer basis”[11]

In Howard’s view, modern critics, especially psychologists such as Freud (whom he does not mention by name), had destroyed this German idealism and replaced it with a materialistic approach that dehumanizes human beings. Howard was particularly appalled by the use of psychological techniques for war propaganda.

Howard felt that scientists bore a burden of guilt for the unprecedented destruction wrought by modern warfare. He wrote, “The war through which we have just passed, has shown that modern science, which we supposed was devised to further civilization, can be used to reduce man to a beast, and destroy what the years have built up.”

Howard concluded by observing that the spirit of service and idealism is desperately needed in the postwar world. “The world is in pain. Men have lost their way. Another war will bring a new age of darkness and yet every move of the diplomatists of Europe increases the probability of another such war.”

Howard’s idealism was tinged with realism about human weakness. For this reason, he rejected the idea of inevitable historical or spiritual progress, an idea he associated both with Hegel and with his mentor Rufus Jones. According to John Cary, when Howard was asked what he thought of Rufus Jones, he replied: “He was too Hegelian.”[12] For Howard, human progress could best be described in that old phrase: “Two steps forward, one step backward.” Having experienced first-hand the brutality of modern war, Howard was far less optimistic than Rufus Jones and his generation. Although Howard was not as “disillusioned” as those of the Jazz Generation, he could to some extent understand and empathize with their “doubt and bewilderment.”[13]

It should be noted that after World War I, pacifism was embraced by most mainline Protestant leaders, as Patricia Appelbaum explains in her book Kingdom to Commune: Protestant Pacifist Culture between World War I and the Vietnam Era (University of North Carolina Press: 2009):

Most Protestant denominations during that period [after World War I] declared themselves opposed to war. Interdenominational groups like the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) fostered pacifism. Many of the more than one hundred peace organizations founded in the 1920s had significant mainline participation and leadership.[14]

Because of their historical commitment to the Peace Testimony and their distinctive beliefs and mode of worship, Quakers had a unique role to play in this movement. “While chroniclers of Quaker history have often focused on Friends’ exceptionalism,” writes Appelbaum, “I would suggest instead that Quakers occupied a sort of borderland with respect to the Protestant mainline. They had by the turn of the twentieth century moved some distance away from their original sectarianism, and over the course of the century they developed many social and theological connections with the mainline. On the other hand, their beliefs and practices remained distinctive enough that those who joined them as converts experienced Quakerism as different from other Protestant communions, and many midcentury mainliners regarded the Society of Friends as model denomination different from their own.”[15] Applebaum sees the relationship between Quaker and mainline Protestant pacifism as “dialectical.”

During the 1920s, Howard did what he could to promote pacifism at Earlham College and elsewhere. Howard’s experience during the war also made him impatient with Friends who rest on their laurels or take a passive approach to peacemaking. In a 1926 commencement address to the graduating students at Barnesville, Ohio, Howard warned about the dangers of complacency during times of peace:

You are just old enough to remember how the great war came upon us and found us unprepared for the emergency. We had been thinking too much about traditions and not enough about the world around us. Finally we rallied from the shock and discovered that our peace testimony did not mean merely that we did not do certain things, it meant that we did do other things. We found our work in helping heal the wounds of war. Now that the number is growing who believe that only evil can came out of the war, we are patted on the back and told how wonderful we are. It is time for great humility. The truth is that since the stimulus of active relief work is removed, we are drifting back to our old negative attitude and peace means only that we don’t fight, not that we are endeavoring to make a world where peace is possible.[16]

Because Howard and Anna had both seen first-hand the horrific effects of war, they never lapsed into their pre-war complacency about the need to witness and work for peace. More will be said later about how the Brintons embodied the Peace Testimony both in their actions and in their writings.

Of particular concern to Howard (and to most Quakers at this time) was pacifism. The pacifist movement spread throughout Europe and the United States in the 1920s and 1930s, but the threat of a second war world caused some to doubt whether pacifism would be enough to stop the rise of militarism in Germany and Italy.

“Friends believed that their pacifism followed so naturally and inevitably from their other more fundamental principles that little is said about it in early Quaker writings,” wrote Howard.[17] Although some might question how widespread pacifism was among early Friends, twentieth century Quakers certainly felt the need to articulate their pacifist principles. Early Pendle Hill pamphleteers included A.J. Muste (1885-67), who wrote “The World Task of Pacifism” (#13, 1941) and “War is the Enemy” (#15, 1942), and Richard Gregg, who wrote “Pacifist Program in Time of War” (#5, 1939) and “A Discipline for Non-Violence” (#11, 1941). But it was Howard who articulated the theological basis for Quaker pacifism in a way that has had an enduring influence upon Friends.

As World War II broke out in Europe, Howard began writing essays on pacifism which were collected into a Pendle Hill booklet called Critique by Eternity (1943). In this booklet, which was widely used in Quaker First Day Schools, Howard lays out what have become the seminal ideas of Quaker peacemaking.

First, Howard argued that isolationism and pacifism are polar opposites. The true pacifist is engaged with the world, and seeks to bring about a peaceful society by eliminating injustice. A pacifist is someone who has experienced inner peace, usually within the context of a supportive religious community, and then seeks to bring out peace in the world through the elimination of selfishness. The root cause of war is a sense of isolation that leads to barriers between people—borders, tariffs, armies, etc.

In “Why Are Quakers Pacifists?” Howard uses a historical approach. He discussed the faith and practice of early Friends and observed that they did not write a lot about pacifism or the Peace Testimony because they were primarily concerned not with “right action in itself but a right inward state out of which right action will arise.”[18]

In “Blitzkrieg and Pacifism” Howard takes an approach rooted in biology (Howard frequently described Quaker approach to religion as “organic” as opposed to the “mechanical”).[19] According to Howard, violence depends on quickness because its very nature is mechanical and self-destructive. Pacifism, on the other hand, works slowly because it is an organic process. “The pacifist therefore cannot depend on blitzkrieg methods,” concludes Howard. “He must abide the slowness of organic. An inanimate bomb reaches its goal swiftly, annihilating whatever is in its way. A living object is soft and pliant, slowly adjusting its environment to itself. It must always depend on small beginnings, germ cells which are perhaps invisible. The pacifist is not afraid of minute beginnings, aimed at the distant future. Violence works quickly, but in the realm of life results are never swift.”[20]

In Howard’s view, curing the unhealthy tendencies in a violence-addicted society like ours will not be accomplished quickly through some kind of pacifist “wonder drug,” but will require a slow, organic healing process.

Like Gregg, Muste and others who regarded pacifism as a way of life, Howard was convinced that pacifism cannot succeed if it is based merely on facts, theories and intellectual concepts. True pacifism must be grounded in spiritual experience, and in a community where peace and reconciliation are practiced as a way of life. This “new pacifism,“ as Howard termed it, also requires discipline and training, not unlike that of a soldier. “As on the drill ground soldiers acquire the habit of obedience,” wrote Howard, “so, in the discipline and collective experience of the meeting, worshippers become wonted to heed the Captain of their souls.”[21]

Howard’s ideas about peacemaking have permeated Quaker thinking and still have relevance today. The Brintons’ commitment to the peace testimony also had an influence on their son Edward, who turned 18 one month after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Ed became a conscientious objector and served in a Civilian Public Service Camp (CPS). As a result, Anna took a special interest in the camps and wrote an essay called “Uncharted Education” for the Friends Intelligencer. In this essay, she reflected on the educational opportunities that CPS camps afforded—no doubt concerned about what might happen to young men like her son during this critical period.

Anna painted an idealistic picture of what life in a CPS camp could or should be like. Among other things, she proposed that they include adult study classes like those at Pendle Hill and the New York School for Social Research, and encouraged Friends to offer their services as lecturers and teachers. In the spring of 1943, Pendle Hill hosted a training institute for directors of CPS Hospital units. It also welcomed Friends and others involved with the Friends Ambulance Unit in China.[22]

It is characteristic of Anna that she would see the challenges of life in a CPS as an opportunity to grow spiritually and intellectually. She concluded: “The seriousness of the peace testimony in war time and the difficulty of exemplifying it in collective life under the draft bring a steady pressure on all C.O.’s. It is pressure that makes marble out of limestone. Pressure may produce from Civilian Public Service at least some superior and enduring qualities.”[23]

Her words proved prophetic. Many of the young men who served in the CPS camps, often under tremendous stress and pressure, and under conditions far from ideal, went on to become leaders in the Religious Society of Friends.

After WWII, Howard and Anna both became involved with the ecumenical movement where they became advocates for the Quaker Peace Testimony as an essential part of Christian witness.

Brinton attended the founding assembly of the World Council of Churches in Amsterdam in 1948, the year after Friends were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts in relief and reconstruction following two world wars. Brinton wanted the assembly to adopt a pacifist stance and met with little resistance:

Those of us who were pacifists or inclined toward pacifism, found it surprisingly easy to introduce into the Report such declarations as ‘War is contrary to the will of God,’ ‘War as a method of settling disputes is incompatible with the teaching and example of our Lord Jesus Christ,’ ‘The church has always demanded to obey God rather than men.’

It was, however, disappointing to Brinton to discover afterwards that some of the delegates agreeing to these words were followers of “Christian realists” such as Reinhold Nieburh and adopted this stance with a mental reservation because it constituted “an unattainable ideal, a perfectionism impossible of achievement in this imperfect world” (390).
In Friends for 300 Years, Howard wrote a theological defense of pacifism against those such as Niebuhr and Barth who considered peace unattainable in a sinful world. Howard challenged Christian Realism with the Quaker belief in the Inward Light. Niebuhr felt that Christians had a responsibility to resist evil, even if it meant resorting to violence. As Howard explained in Friends for 300 Years, Friends believe that we must live according to the measure of the light that has been inwardly revealed to us, including Christ’s teaching that we “love our enemy.” Even though human beings are imperfect, and even though human society is flawed, we are obliged to follow Christ’s example to the best of our ability, as Spirit leads us.
“If Jesus was himself a pacifist, as even the Neo-Orthodox admit,” wrote Howard, “we must be pacifists also if we obey his command to follow him.”[24]
For Howard, the Quaker approach to Christian ethics is best summed up in a rejoinder by Joseph Hoag, a nineteenth-century peace advocate. When Hoag advocated the Quaker peace testimony in 1812, a member of the audience said, “Well, stranger, if all the world was of your mind I would turn and follow after.”
Hoag replied, “So then thou hast a mind to be the last man to be good. I have a mind to be one of the first and set the rest an example.”[25]
Anna did her bit to support peacemaking by joining the board of the AFSC in 1938 and serving for nearly 30 years. From 1958-1960 and from 1962-1965 she served as vice president of the Board. In 1965, she resigned from the Board due to old age and ill health.


At this time, Doris Darnell wrote a letter on behalf of the American Friends Service Committee in which she remembers with fondness Anna’s thirty years of service.

It is impossible to put into words what Anna Brinton meant to the AFSC. To new staff members I have said that at some point they must meet Howard and Anna Brinton. . . .

The day I most cherish in the past six months was that May Monday when the Personnel Department was to spend an hour at staff meeting interpreting our work to others. Through posters, brief comments, witty but informative flow charts we attempted to communicate some of the demands, pressures, and achievements. And then came the frosting on the cake when Anna Brinton spoke of the old days, illustrating the points she was making with humor, with telling anecdotes, with an obvious delight in having been part of it all. Her fund of stories, her interest in each person as an individual, her acceptance of human frailties made her beloved by all. We who knew her well will have a special feeling of being among the privileged many. How fortunate we all are whose lives were touched and brightened by hers![26]

In my pamphlet, “Living the Peace Testimony: The Legacy of Howard and Anna Brinton,” I address the question: What can we learn from the Brintons’ experience of peacemaking?

First, Quaker pacifism is not based upon intellectual concepts or an ideology. Rather it springs from a religious concern, inwardly felt as a “leading of the Spirit.”

Second, such leadings often involve reaching out to those who are seen by society as the enemy and building bridges of understanding.

Third, Quaker peace activism is not a profession or career, but a way of life.

Anna Brinton summed up the main elements of Quaker mission/activism as follows:

These [missions] were in no sense career activities, they were a kind of volunteering carried on without the spur of reputation. Even to assess prospects of success or failure played no real part in the effort. The important factor is obedience to an inward requirement clearly felt, and agreed to by one’s fellow members. With this impetus, ordinary men and women have undertaken extraordinary missions.

In fewer words, in a 1963 symposium on the “Spiritual Basis of AFSC Work” Anna told this anecdote: “Someone once asked a staff person at Pendle Hill if she liked her job, and the woman replied, ‘It’s not my job, it’s my life.’”

Through their writings and teaching Howard and Anna Brintons helped to clarify the spiritual, theological and historical basis for the Friends’ Peace Testimony. But it is in their lives that we see most vividly the Quaker spirit at work in the world. This legacy of peacemaking continues to be invaluable as we struggled to find our own way as Quaker peacemakers in the twenty-first century.




===
[1] Autobiography, p. 99. Much of this section is taken from Living the Peace Testimony, The Legacy of Howard and Anna Brinton, Anthony Manousos. Pendle Hill Pamphlet 372.
[2] See Brinton’s “World Pacifist Conference,” Friends Intelligencer, Sixth Month 12, 1954.
[3] “Buddhists, Quakers, Peace,” by Howard Brinton, The Friend, Sixth Month 10, 1954, p. 416.
[4] Autobiography, p. 102.
[5] Mather, p. 32: “We marched with yellow robed priests from Ceylon. Some Indians wore business suits, others their Prince Alberts. The Japanese were in stiff brocade. Priest Fujii and his monks and nuns, all newly shorn the night before so that their pates were smooth as ostrich eggs, were clad in white with yellow mantles. Many were beating fan-shaped drums. . . . The cadence of this refrain [“Hail to the Lotus of Perfect Truth”] ran through everything, greeting us on station platforms, giving a rhythm for our walking, and faintly or more loudly was heard at any hour of day or night. . . . We were feasted, flowered, and photographed, and put up at the finest of Yamagata’s Inns.”
[6] “The Present Strategic Position of the Society of Friends,” The Friend, Fourth Month 29, 1920, p. 518.
[7] Op. cit. p. 518.
[8] Op. cit. p. 518.
[9] Autobiography, p. 33-34.
[10] American Friend, Seventh Month 7, 1921, p 533.
[11] Op. cit., p. 534.
[12] John Cary, a professor of German at Haverford College, who is married to Brinton’s daughter Catharine.
[13] In “Quakerism and Progress,” written at the height of the Great Depression, Brinton wrote: “Through science we proclaim a god-like control over Nature and through science we reduce ourselves to the very nature we seek to control. The man of today is a pitiable figure. Driven back on himself because he has lost his material goods, he looks into his soul and finds it empty. It is an age of doubt and bewilderment” (Friends Intelligencer, Sixth Month 11, 1932, p. 439). Brinton argued that “my study of the evolutionary process has led me that we can go forward only by occasionally going backward.” This meant returning to a simpler, more “organic” way of life associated with Quakerism.
[14] Opus cit, p. 3.
[15] Ibid, p. 5.
[16] Delivered 6th mo. 4th, Olney Current, 1926?, pp. 16-22. Translated into German and reprinted in the German Quaker newsletter, Mittelungen fur die Freunde des Quakertums in Deutschland, January 1926. From the Howard Haines Brinton and Anna Shipley Cox Papers, Quaker Manuscript Collection, Haverford College Library.
[17] Friends for 350 Years, Wallingford, PA: Pendle Hill Publication, 2002, p. 196. Margaret Bacon in her note observed that “the expectation that members would not fight was probably less common in the seventeenth century than here stated” (p. 287).
[18] Critique by Eternity, Wallingford, PA: Pendle Hill, 1943, p. 21.
[19] Brinton’s ideas here may also have been influenced by Taoism and by the mystical works of Jacob Boehme, who was the subject of Brinton’s doctoral dissertation.
[20] Op. cit., p. 19.
[21] Op cit., p. 24.
[22] Pendle Hill Bulletin, #48, June, 1943.
[23] Friends Intelligencer, First Month 15, 1944, p. 42.
[24] Friends for 350 Years, edited by Margaret Bacon. Pendle Hill: Wallingford, PA, 2002.
[25] Ibid, pp. 196-7.
[26] Letter by Doris Darnell, Philadelphia, PA, October 30, 1969.

Howard Brinton, Anna Cox Brinton - Wikipedia

Howard Brinton - Wikipedia

Howard Brinton

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Howard Haines Brinton (1884–1973) was an author, professor and director whose work influenced the Religious Society of Friends movement for much of the 20th century. His books ranged from Quaker journal anthologies to philosophical and historical dissertations on the faith, establishing him as a prominent commentator on the Society of Friends.

Early life[edit]

Howard Brinton was born on 24 July 1884, in West Chester, Pennsylvania to a Quaker couple, who were from different strands of the Quaker faith: his father Orthodox and his mother Hicksite.[1]

Academic career[edit]

He studied at Haverford College with Rufus Jones and graduated in 1905, obtaining a master's degree in 1906. He taught at Olney Friends School in Barnesville, Ohio, and at Pickering College in New Market, Ontario. In 1909, he obtained a doctorate in Physics from Harvard.[??]

In 1916, Howard Brinton was appointed acting President of Guilford College, North Carolina, at a troubled time for the college. He visited conscientious objectors imprisoned at Camp Jackson, South Carolina, who were not permitted to communicate with outside and whose location was not known to their relatives and friends.[1]

AFSC[edit]

This visit inspired him to join, in 1919, the American Friends Service Committee soon after, which allowed Quakers and other pacifists to serve during wartime in nonviolent means.[1] It also co-ordinated relief to the victims of war.

The chaotic consequences of war, that he witnessed in Upper Silesia influenced his work as a pacifist speaker and writer in the 1920s and 1930s. It was during this period that he met Anna Shipley Cox (19 October 1887 - 28 October 1969), who also worked in Europe for AFSC. They married when he returned to the United States [2] on 25 July 1921.[3]

Academic career (continued)[edit]

In 1925, he obtained a doctorate in Philosophy from the University of California,[1] while Anna taught at Mills College. Then they moved to Earlham College, Indiana, where both taught and their first three children were born. In 1929, they returned to California, where their fourth child was born and both taught at Mills. During this period he became involved in the case of Thomas Mooney and Warren Billings.

In 1931, they spent a year in England at Woodbrooke Quaker College in Birmingham. In that year, Howard gave the Swarthmore Lecture at London Yearly Meeting, with the title Creative Worship.

Pendle Hill[edit]

In 1936, Howard and Anna Cox Brinton became co-directors at the Pendle Hill religious center in Wallingford, Pennsylvania.[4]

A pen portrait of Pendle Hill in the Brinton period appeared in Time Magazine 21 June 1948.[5] The article indicates the diversity of the students and the variety of their studies.

Brinton used this opportunity to produce over a dozen books and pamphlets dealing with Quakerism. Ironically, one of his most productive writing periods came during World War II, during which he published the widely used "A Guide to Quaker Practice.".[6] One of his later works, "Friends for 300 Years," was cited by Elizabeth Vining as "one of the great Quaker books of all time."

Japan and later years[edit]

In 1949, Anna Brinton left Pendle Hill to work with AFSC. Howard continued until 1952, when he retired and the couple moved to Japan, in AFSC service. They returned to Pendle Hill in 1954. Howard's Japanese secretary, Yuki Takahashi, a widow, returned with them to help her employer write his memoirs, which have never been published. In May 1972, the nearly blind and aged Brinton, having obtained consent from his adult children, surprised everyone by marrying Takahashi.

Howard Brinton died on 9 April 1973.[7] He is buried with Anna Brinton at the Oakland Friends Cemetery, West ChesterChester County, Pennsylvania.[8]

Publications[edit]

incomplete list
  • A Religious Solution to the Social Problem (1934)
  • Quaker Education in Theory and Practice (1940)
  • Guide to Quaker Practice (1943)
  • The Society of Friends (1948)
  • Friends for 300 years (1952)

Pendle Hill pamphlets by Howard Brinton[edit]

  • A Religious Solution To The Social Problem by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #2
  • The Quaker Doctrine of Inward Peace by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #44
  • The Nature of Quakerism by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #47
  • The Society of Friends by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #48
  • Prophetic Ministry by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #54
  • Reaching Decisions by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #65
  • How They Became Friends by Howard Brinton, Pendle Hill pamphlet #144

,[6][9]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b c d Living the Peace Testimony: the legacy of Howard and Anna Brinton by Anthony Manousos. Wallingford, Pennsylvania, Pendle Hill, 2004 (Pendle Hill pamphlets #372) ISBN 0-87574-372-2
  2. ^ for a biography of Anna Brinton see Pendle Hill pamphlets #176 (1971) Anna Brinton: a Study in Quaker Character by Eleanore Price Mather
  3. ^ Date of marriage deduced from Manousos (p. 31): "She returned home to Pendle Hill [in 1946] on 23 July, the twenty-fifth anniversary of her marriage".
  4. ^ Manousos p.19: Howard became Acting Director in 1934
  5. ^ "Religion: Pendle Hill"Time. 21 June 1948. Archived from the original on February 27, 2010. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  6. Jump up to:a b "List of Howard Brinton's publications on Pendle Hill website". Archived from the original on 26 October 2008. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  7. ^ "Brf - Brn - New General Catalog of Old Books & Authors"www.authorandbookinfo.com. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  8. ^ "Howard Haines Brinton (1884-1973) at Find a Grave". Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  9. ^ For an extensive list of Howard Brinton's publications see Tripod Catalog: Catalogue of the libraries of Bryn Mawr, Haverford and Swarthmore colleges. His papers are at Haverford College.

External links[edit]


==

Anna Cox Brinton

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Anna Cox Brinton
A white woman's face, in profile, facing viewer's right. Her hair is pinned up.
Anna Cox Brinton, from a 1934 newspaper.
Born
Anna Shipley Cox

October 19, 1887
San Jose, California
DiedOctober 28, 1969 (aged 82)
Wallingford, Pennsylvania
Occupationclassics scholar, Quaker leader
Known forco-director of Pendle Hill Center for Quaker Studies
Spouse(s)Howard Brinton
Children4; daughters Lydia, Catharine, and Joan, and son Edward Brinton

Anna Shipley Cox Brinton (October 19, 1887 – October 28, 1969) was an American classics scholar, college administrator, writer, and Quaker leader, active with the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC).

She has credited with being one of those who "reinvented Quakerism" for the 20th century.

Early life[edit]

Anna Shipley Cox was born in San Jose, California,[1] the daughter of Charles Ellwood Cox and Lydia S. Bean Cox, and the granddaughter of Quaker leader Joel Bean.[2] Her father was mathematics professor at Stanford University.[3] She attended Westtown School in Philadelphia, and completed both undergraduate work and doctoral studies at Stanford University, in 1909[4] and in 1917,[5] respectively. Her sister was Catharine Cox Miles, a psychologist based at Stanford University.[3]

Career[edit]

Academic work[edit]

Brinton was a professor of archaeology and art history, on the faculty at Mills College.[6] She was convener of the college's School of Fine Arts, and dean of the Mills College faculty. She also taught Latin and Greek and was head of the classics department at Earlham College in Indiana, from 1921 to 1928.[7][8] Her dissertation project, a translation and commentary titled Maphaeus Vegius and his Thirteenth Book of the Aeneid, was published by Stanford University Press in 1930,[9] and reissued in 2002.[10]

Brinton prepared A Pre-Raphaelite Aeneid, which was privately published in 1934 by art collector Estelle Doheny (wife of Edward L. Doheny).[11] She was a delegate to the Pan-Pacific Women's Conference in Hawaii in 1930.[12][13] In 1931 and 1932, she held a Woodbrooke Fellowship, for advanced studies at Selly Oak College in England.[1] She was a speaker at the Institute of World Affairs meeting in Riverside, California, in 1934.[14]

American Friends Service Committee[edit]

Brinton was active with the AFSC for decades, serving on the organization's board from 1938 to 1965. After World War I, she went to Silesia with the organization's child feeding program. In 1931, she and her husband organized the Pacific Yearly Meeting, a west coast organization of Friends.[5] In 1936, the Brintons were named co-directors of the Pendle Hill Quaker Center for Study and Contemplation, near Philadelphia.[5] She was the AFSC's Commissioner for Asia from 1948.[15] In 1952, the Brintons went to Japan with the AFSC, to direct Quaker postwar relief work in Tokyo.[16][17]

In the 1960s, she was president of the Friends Historical Association. She edited a text by William Penn (No Cross, No Crown, 1945),[18] an essay collection, Then & Now: Quaker Essays, Historical and Contemporary (1960)[19] and a reference work, Quaker Profiles: Pictorial & Biographical 1750-1850 (1964),[20] and wrote a biography, The Wit and Wisdom of William Bacon Evans (1964), and a history, Toward Undiscovered Ends: Friends and Russia for 300 Years (1951).[21]

Personal life[edit]

Anna Cox married writer Howard Haines Brinton in 1921. They had four children together. Lydia, the eldest, Cathrine, an elementary school teacher, Joan, the youngest, and their son Edward Brinton (1924-2010) became a noted oceanographer. She died from a stroke on October 28, 1969, aged 82 years, in Wallingford, Pennsylvania.[1]

Biographies[edit]

  • Eleanor Price Mather, Anna Brinton: a Study in Quaker Character (1971)[22]
  • Anthony Manousos, Living the Peace Testimony: The Legacy of Howard and Anna Brinton (2004 pamphlet)[23]
  • Catharine Forbes, compiler, with Catharine Brinton Cary and Joan Brinton Erickson, A Quaker Marriage of Philosophy and Art: Words and Pictures of Howard and Anna Brinton (2012)[24]
  • Anthony Manousos, Howard and Anna Brinton: Re-Inventors of Quakerism in the Twentieth Century (2013)[25][26]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b c "Anna Cox Brinton Dies; Author, Scholar"The Philadelphia Inquirer. October 30, 1969. p. 20. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ J. W. B. (June 15, 1922). "Lydia Shipley Cox, an Appreciation"The Friend95: 594–595.
  3. Jump up to:a b "Former Richmond Resident is Dead at Philadelphia"The Richmond Item. June 13, 1930. p. 15. Retrieved September 20, 2019– via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "Class of 1909 Has Farewell Day on 'Quad'"San Francisco Call. May 18, 1909. p. 16. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  5. Jump up to:a b c Abbott, Margery Post; Chijioke, Mary Ellen; Dandelion, Pink (2006). The A to Z of the Friends (Quakers). Scarecrow Press. pp. 31–33. ISBN 9780810856110.
  6. ^ Rood, Alice Ryan (October 4, 1932). "Dr. Anna Brinton Will Speak on Orient, Europe"Oakland Tribune. p. 26D. Retrieved September 20,2019 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  7. ^ "Anna Cox Brinton Talks About Italy to Altrusa Club"Palladium-Item. December 8, 1927. p. 9. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ "Secure H. H. Brinton, Wife, for Earlham Faculty Next Year"Palladium-Item. February 22, 1922. p. 4. Retrieved September 20,2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Brinton, Anna Cox (1930). Maphaeus Vegius and his thirteenth book of the Aeneid,chapter on Virgil in the Renaissance. Stanford University Press. hdl:2027/mdp.39015005391282.
  10. ^ Buckley, Emma (February 2003). "Review of: Maphaeus Vegius and his Thirteenth Book of the Aeneid"Bryn Mawr Classical ReviewISSN 1055-7660.
  11. ^ Brinton, Anna Cox; Doheny, Estelle; Ritchie, Ward; Rogers, Bruce; Pforzheimer Bruce Rogers Collection (Library of Congress) (1934). A pre-Raphaelite Aeneid of Virgil in the collection of Mrs. Edward Laurence Doheny of Los Angeles: being an essay in honor of the William Morris centenary, 1934. Los Angeles, Calif.: Printed for Mrs. Edward Laurence Doheny by Ward Ritchie. OCLC 4233993.
  12. ^ "Mrs. Cox, Dr. Brinton Entertained on Kauai"Honolulu Star-Bulletin. August 19, 1930. p. 9. Retrieved September 19, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "Delegates to Conference in Hawaii"The San Francisco Examiner. July 27, 1930. p. 63. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Women Leaders to Take Part in World Institute"The Los Angeles Times. December 5, 1934. p. 6. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Anna Cox Brinton"Women In Peace. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  16. ^ Chun, Ella (February 7, 1955). "Friends Organization in Important Role in Japan"The Honolulu Advertiser. p. 15. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ Leeds, Claire (February 15, 1955). "Distinguished Quaker Leader Back from Japan Assignment"The San Francisco Examiner. p. 16. Retrieved September 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "William Penn's No Cross, No Crown"Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets. 1945. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  19. ^ Brinton, Anna Cox (1960). "Then & Now: Quaker Essays, Historical and Contemporary"Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  20. ^ Brinton, Anna Cox (1964). Quaker profiles, pictorial and biographical, 1750-1850 / Anna Cox Brinton. Wallingford, Pa.: Pendle Hill Publications. OCLC 1437981.
  21. ^ Brinton, Anna Cox (1951). "Toward Undiscovered Ends: Friends and Russia for 300 Years"Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  22. ^ Mather, Eleanor Price (1971). "Anna Brinton: a Study in Quaker Character"Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  23. ^ Manousos, Anthony. "Living the Peace Testimony: The Legacy of Howard and Anna Brinton"Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  24. ^ "A Quaker Marriage of Philosophy and Art: Words and Pictures of Howard and Anna Brinton"Pendle Hill Quaker Books & Pamphlets. Retrieved 2019-09-20.
  25. ^ Manousos, Anthony. (2013). Howard and Anna Brinton : re-inventors of Quakerism in the twentieth century : an interpretive biography. Philadelphia, PA. ISBN 9781937768102OCLC 847246085.
  26. ^ Stanfield, Pablo (2013-11-01). "Howard and Anna Brinton - Review"Western Friend. Retrieved 2019-09-20.

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