William Pollard


William Pollard was an English Quaker writer and recorded minister. He was a prominent advocate of quietist Quaker theology in a period of theological dispute within the society.

Early life

Pollard was born at Horsham, Sussex, on 10 June 1828, the ninth child of James Pollard and his wife, Susannah.
He became a junior teacher at the Friends' School, Croydon in 1843, and in 1849 entered the Flounders Institute at Ackworth, Yorkshire, a Quaker college for training schoolmasters. He was appointed a master at the Quaker Ackworth School in 1851 and remained there for 16 years.
Pollard married Lucy Binns of Bishopwearmouth on 12 January 1854. They had ten children. Pollard was the author of several Quaker tracts while he was at Ackworth, including Primitive Christianity Revived and Congregational Worship. Ill-health obliged him to leave the teaching profession in 1866, but he was first mentioned as a recorded minister in the same year, when the family moved to Reigate.

''A Reasonable Faith''

From 1866 to 1872, Pollard worked for the photographer Francis Frith. A proponent of liberal, quietist Quaker theology, he was co-author, with Frith and W. E. Turner, of the influential book A Reasonable Faith, "by Three Friends", which provoked outcry among evangelically minded Quakers. In 1871 he published Considerations Addressed to the Society of Friends on the Peace Question, and in 1872 he became secretary and lecturer to the Lancashire and Cheshire International Arbitration Association, a branch of the Peace Society. He held this post for most of the rest of his life.

Retirement

Around 1872, Pollard and his family moved to Sale, Cheshire. He died on 26 September 1893 at his home, Drayton Lodge, Eccles, Lancashire, and was buried in the Quaker cemetery at Ashton-on-Mersey. He was survived by his wife, five sons and three daughters.