1. Robert Rich of Barbados, Something in Answer to a Book … Called, The Hidden Things Brought to Light (London, 1679); Robert Rich, Mr. Robert Rich His Second Letters from Barbadoes (London, 1679); Robert Rich, An Epistle to the People Called Quakers (London, 1680); Robert Rich, Abstracts of Some Letters (London, 1680); Nigel Smith, “Hidden things brought to light: enthusiasm and Quaker discourse,” Prose Studies 17.3 (1994): 57–69.
2. TNA, CO 1/16, no. 106; BDA, RB 6/13, p. 237; BDA, RB 6/10, p. 147; BDA, RB 6/13, p. 115; Barry Reay, “Popular hostility towards Quakers in mid-seventeenth-century England,” Social History 5.3 (1980): 387–407.
3. Besse, Collection, ii, pp. 352, 366; Margaret E. Hirst, The Quakers in Peace and War: An Account of Their Peace Principles and Practice (London: Swarthmore Press, 1923), p. 315. Stapleton complained that the arrival of the Quaker ship had turned 700 militiamen Quaker, who would not fight.
4. BLARS, HW/85/10; BLARS, HW/85/8; Mabel Brailsford, Quaker Women, 1650–1690 (London: Duckworth, 1915); BLARS, MW/85/51; To the Yearly Meeting of Friends & Brethren in Philadelphia, America (London, 1699); [Thomas Andrews], A Modest Enquiry into the Weight of Theodore Eccleston’s Reply (London, 1709); Theodore Eccleston, A Tender Farewel to My Loving Friends (n.p., n.d. [London?, 1726?]).
5. TNA, CO 31/2; BDA, RB 6/43, p. 64; George Warne Labaw, Preakness and the Preakness Reformed Church, Passaic County, New Jersey: a History1695– 1902 (Board of Publication of the Reformed Church of America, 1902), p. 7;