Category
page 120th-century Quakers

Richard Nixon
Richard Milhous Nixon was the 37th president of the United States, serving from 1969 until his resignation in 1974. A member of the Republican Party, he represented California in both houses of the United States Congress before serving as the 36th vice president under President Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1953 to 1961. His presidency saw the reduction of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, détente with the Soviet Union and China, the Apollo 11 Moon landing, and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency and Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Nixon's second term ended early when he became the only U.S. president to resign from office, as a result of the Watergate scandal.
James Dean
American actor (1931–1955)

Dorothy Hodgkin
British chemist
Joan Baez
American contemporary folk musician (born 1941)
Montgomery Clift
American actor (1920–1966)
David Lean
British film director (1908–1991)

Alan Lloyd Hodgkin
physiologist and biophysicist (1914-1998)

William Vickrey
Canadian-American professor of economics and Nobel Laureate (1914-1996)
Lou Henry Hoover
First Lady of the United States from 1929 to 1933
Robert F. Engle
American economist and Nobel laureate (born 1942)
Edward R. Murrow
American broadcast journalist (1908–1965)
Timothy Snyder
American historian (born 1969)

Kathleen Lonsdale
Irish crystallographer (1903-1971)

David McClelland
American psychologist (1917–1998)

Ursula Franklin
Canadian metallurgist, research physicist, author, and educator (1921–2016)

Kenneth E. Boulding
British-American economist (1910-1993)
Smedley Butler
United States Marine Corps general, two time Medal of Honor recipient, activist, lecturer, official, and writer (1881-1940)
Bayard Rustin
American civil rights activist (1912–1987)
Whittaker Chambers
Defected Communist spy, writer, editor (1901–1961)
Pierre Cérésole
Swiss pacifist, engineer and quaker (1879-1945)
Elisabeth Abegg
German educationist and resistance fighter (1882–1974)
Paul Eddington
British actor (1927–1995)
Joe Fry
British racing driver

Roland Penrose
British artist and art historian (1900-1984)
Alice Herz
American-based German activist
Norman Morrison
American Vietnam War self-immolator (1933-1965)
Mary Calderone
American physician (1904-1998)
Emilia Fogelklou
Swedish theologist and writer

Pit Corder
language scholar from England (1918-1990)

Henry H. Goddard
American psychologist (1866–1957)

Gertrud Luckner
German WWII anti-Nazi resister; Righteous Among the Nations
Elizabeth Gray Vining
American writer
Barbara Deming
American writer, journalist, and activist (1917-1984)
Waldo Williams
Welsh poet (1904–1971)
Priscilla Hannah Peckover
English pacifist
Hélène Monastier
Swiss teacher and pacifist (1882-1976)
John K. Samson
Canadian musician
Terry Waite
English humanitarian
Richard J. C. Atkinson
British prehistorian/archaeologist (1920-1994)
Donald Swann
British composer (1923-1994)
Peter Laszlo Peri
Hungarian sculptor (1899-1967)
Jessamyn West
American author (1902–1984)
J. Howard Marshall
American billionaire businessman (1905–1995)
George Forsythe
Stanford University computer scientist (1917-1972)
Charles F. Brannan
American politician (1903-1992)
Ferdinand Barlow
French choreographer and composer

Camilla Wedgwood
British anthropologist (1901-1955)
Marshall Hodgson
American historian (1922–1968)
Forrest Shreve
American botanist (1878-1950)

Ruth Harrison
British activist (1920-2000)
Muriel Duckworth
Canadian activist (1908-2009)
Stephen Donaldson
LGBT political activist (1946–1996)
John Wimber
American charismatic minister (1934–1997)
Vera Green
American anthropologist and academic
R. B. Braithwaite
English philosopher and ethicist (1900–1990)
Fritz Eichenberg
American/German illustrator and wood engraver (1901–1990)
Eric Baker
British activist (1920–1976)

Valerie Taylor
American writer (1913-1997)

Eliot Hodgkin
British artist (1905-1987)
Richard Foster
American Quaker theologian