This is a list of notable businesses, organizations or charities founded by Quakers. Many of these are no longer managed or influenced by Quakers. At the end of the article are businesses that have never had any connection to Quakers, although some people may believe that they did or still do.
See separate List of Friends schools
Businesses, organizations or charities with Quaker origins
A
- Albright and Wilson, manufacturing chemists
- Allen & Hanburys, founded in London in 1715 by Quaker Silvanus Bevan and his brother Timothy; grew to be a leading pharmaceutical company with operations in Argentina, Australia, Britain, Canada, China, India and South Africa before being acquired by Glaxo Laboratories in 1958
- Alternatives to Violence Project, volunteer-run conflict transformation program started in a New York prison in 1975
- American Friends Service Committee, Quaker peace and social justice organization founded in 1917
- Amnesty International, human rights organization; Eric Baker was a founding partner
B
- Barclays Bank, finance
- Bethlehem Steel, founded by Quaker entrepreneur Joseph Wharton
- Bewley's, Irish hot beverage company founded by Samuel and Charles Bewley. The Bewleys were one of Ireland's most well known Quaker families.
- Bradshaw's, Victorian and Edwardian publisher of the most widely used railway timetables in Britain, Europe and India, founded by Quaker George Bradshaw
- Bryant and May, former match manufacturing company, founded by two Quakers, Francis May and William Bryant
C
D
- Duane Morris, now one of the 100 largest law firms in the US, and still committed to Quaker values
E
- Earlham College, liberal arts college in Richmond, Indiana, founded in 1847 as the Friends Boarding School, a boarding high school for the religious education of Quaker adolescents
F
G
H
I
J
- Jacob's, Irish biscuit maker, best known for the cream cracker. Founded by William Beale Jacob and his brother Robert who were both Quakers.
- J. S. Fry & Sons, chocolate manufacturer
- John Fowler & Co., manufacturer of agricultural tools and machinery, founded by Quaker engineer and inventor John Fowler
- J H Holmes & Co (showing the entry for John Henry Holmes), electrical engineer, inventor and manufacturers in Newcastle upon Tyne specialising in early motors, dynamos & switches, and were pioneers of electric lighting on trains and the Suez canal
- Johns Hopkins University, renowned private university in Baltimore, Maryland, originally started as a graduate university by Quaker abolitionist Johns Hopkins, early board positions were partly filled by Friends
- Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
- Sandy Spring Bank, founded in 1868 by Quaker farmers, now the largest bank in the state of Maryland, US
- Scott Bader Commonwealth, British manufacturer of advanced resins and composites, founded by Ernest Bader in 1951
- Sony (formerly Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo, or Tokyo Telecommunication Engineering, Co.), TTK's founding board president was Tamon Maeda, a Japanese Quaker, prewar Japanese ambassador to ILO, and postwar Minister of Education
- Stockton and Darlington Railway, established in 1825 by Quaker Edward Pease, operated the world's first permanent steam locomotive-hauled railway line
- Strawbridge and Clothier (now part of Macy's), department store chain, US (Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware)
W
Businesses with no Quaker connection
References
External links
Further reading