Charles F. Jenkins (Quaker)

Charles Francis Jenkins (17 December 1865 – 1951) was an American Quaker and historian.

Charles Francis Jenkins by Fabian Bachrach

Early life

Jenkins was born in Norristown, Pennsylvania, on 17 December 1865. He lived in Wilmington, Delaware, and West Chester, Pennsylvania, where he completed his basic education. He did not attend college.[1]

Career

Jenkins's early career was at the Farm Journal, which had been founded by his uncle Wilmer Atkinson.[1]

He was a member and president of the Buck Hill Falls Company for fifty years, and a member and president of the Board of Managers of Swarthmore College for forty years.[1]

He was a noted horticulturist who collected hemlocks and created the Hemlock Arboretum at his home in Germantown and campaigned to have the plant selected as the state tree of Pennsylvania.[1]

Death and legacy

Jenkins died in 1951.[1]

Selected publications

gollark: And there aren't any and it's really irritating.
gollark: Me too!
gollark: The spec is too unclear.
gollark: Macron is strictly worse than Brain[REDACTED].
gollark: Python is slow and provides few static guarantees and has awful dependency management. Rust is too dependencyuous and often inflexible. Nim has basically no libraries or popular support. All other programming languages are dominated options, as far as I know, by my arbitrary standards.

References

  1. "Charles Francis Jenkins 1865-1951" by Frank Aydelotte, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol.75, No. 4 (January 1951), pp. 365-367.



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