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QuakerResearch inProgress Information concerning Quaker studies in progress but not published should be sent to Henry J. Cadbury, Chairman of tL· Committee on Historical Research, 774 Millbrook Lane, Haverford, Pennsylvania. Thomas S. Abler, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Toronto 5, Canada. An ethnohistorical study of party and faction in the Seneca Nation. (The political organization of the Alleghany and Cattaraugus Sénecas from ca. 1845 to ca. 1900.) University of Toronto: Anthropology, thesis for Ph.D. degree. Stephen Brobeck, 3501 Baring Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Quaker Meetinghouses in and around Colonial Philadelphia. (A comprehensive statistical study of the architectural characteristics of more than 200 meetinghouses built before 1800.) Henry J. Cadbury, 774 Millbrook Lane, Haverford, Pennsylvania 19041. William Hunt of North Carolina in Europe, 1771-1772. (An unpublished diary of visiting meetings in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Holland, with supplementary data from other sources.) Kenneth Charlton, School of Education, University of Birmingham, Birmingham 15, England. James Cropper (1773-1840), Liverpool Quaker Merchant and Philanthropist. (A biographical study.) Regna D. Darnell, 1042 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 19010. The Role of Daniel Garrison Brinton in American Anthropology. (The place of Brinton in late nineteenth-century American and European scholarship, professionalization of anthropology, American Indian ethnography, and linguistics. ) University of Pennsylvania: Anthropology, thesis for M.A. degree. Lucia Patricia Dearmont, 93 Ninth Street, Garden City, New York 11530. Quaker Benevolence in America during the Eighteenth Century, a Disagreement with Sydney V. James, A People Among Peoples: Quaker Benevolence in EighU eenth-Century America. (Covers the historical background of Quaker philosophy out of which developed Quaker charitable endeavors.) Hofstra University: Social Science, thesis for M.A. degree. Completed. Donald G. Good, William Penn College, Oskaloosa, Iowa. Elisha Bates: American Quaker Evangelical in the Early Nineteenth Century. University of Iowa: Religion, thesis for Ph.D. degree. Completed. 109 110Quaker History Edward H. Kass, M.D., Channing Laboratory, Boston City Hospital, 784 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02118. Thomas Hodgkin, M.D. (A biographical treatment, with attention to both his medical and non-medical pursuits. ) Gerda Lerner, Department of History, Long Island University, Brooklyn, New York 11201. Abolitionists from South Carolina: a Life of Sarah and Angelina Grimké. Columbia University: History, thesis for Ph.D. degree. Completed. Patrick C. Lipscomb III, Department of History, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803. The Atlantic Antislavery Movement. (A threevolume study of the antislavery movement conceived as an expression of transatlantic European civilization, covering the movement from its origins to 1956.) G. E. McCracken, 1232 39th Street, Des Moines, Iowa. The Welcome Claimants. (Examination of the claims and an account of the claimants and their earlier descendants.) Carl L. Romanek, 458 E. College Street, Apt. 615, State College, Pennsylvania . John Reynell, a Study of Business and Politics in Eighteenth-century Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania State University: History, thesis for Ph.D. degree. Richard Z. Smith, R.R. 3, Box 301, Wilmington, Ohio 45177. Minutes of Wilmington, Ohio, Friends Monthly Meeting, 1868-1873, with an Introduction and Index. Kent State University: Library Science, thesis for M.L.S. degree. Completed. Lamont D. Thomas, 31 Birch Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. Captain Paul Cuffe. (His thoughts and actions in regard to African colonization and any relationship which may exist between them and the emerging American Colonization Society). Trinity College: History, thesis for M.A. degree. Arthur J. Worrall, Department of History, Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, Colorado. New England Quakerism, 1700-1830. (The growth of New England Quakerism in the eighteenth century with attention to institutional arrangements and expansion. Concludes with a discussion of background to the difficulties in Lynn, New Bedford, and Nantucket in the 1820's.) Indiana University: History, thesis for Ph.D. degree. ...

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