Anne Emlen Mifflin (April 30, 1755 - March 22, 1815) [1] was a Quaker minister, abolitionist, and social reformer in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. [2] [3] Bryn Mawr has a collection of her papers including a diary. [4]
She was a member of the Emlen family in Philadelphia, daughter of George and Ann Emlen. [5] Her brother James Emlen was a signatory to the Treaty of Canadaigua in 1794. [6]
She was married to Warner Mifflin in 1788, after his first wife died in 1786. [7] They travelled together and convinced the Society of Friends to allow African Americans full fellowship. [7] They had sons Samuel E. and Lemuel. [8] After Warner Mifflin's death she travelled, preached and was involved in Quaker education and missions to American Indians. [7] She left her two boys in the care of her mother. [9]
She died March 22, 1815, and her will of 1811 left her estate to her two sons. [5]