Quite a task: a group led by historian Thomas Hamm has digitized old records of Dartmouth (Mass.) Meeting. Volunteer Andrea Marcovici gives us a taste of just how involved this process could be:
We struggled with ‘s’s that looked like ‘f’s, ‘y’es that actually were ‘the’s. Capital letters were more art than standard writing, and tired clerks that would write the first few letters of a name and then throw a little letter in the air and figure we would know the rest. We kept a running list of all that we saw in order to keep a consistent practice.
Some of the offenses Dartmouth Friends were disowned for are listed. Some seem quite harmless„ like the brothers who were forced to apologize in 1746 for allowing “fiddling and dancing in their Houses.” Other offenses are shocking in their cruelty, like Friend Abigail Allen, who beat an enslaved African “so unmercyfully” in 1711 that he subsequently died from the wounds. Disownment was not a life sentence: someone could repent and be let back in. Incredibly, only three years later Abigail convinced the meeting that she was sorry for her manslaughter.
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