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  1. Hannah Tatum Whitall Smith (February 7, 1832 – May 1, 1911) was a lay speaker and author in the Holiness movement in the United States and the Higher Life movement in the United Kingdom. She was also active in the women's suffrage movement and the temperance movement.

    • May 1, 1911 (aged 79), England
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Robert Pearsall Smith, ​ ​(m. 1851; died 1898)​
  2. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Hannah Whitall Smith (born February 7, 1832, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died May 1, 1911, Iffley [near Oxford], England) was an American evangelist and reformer, a major public speaker and writer in the Holiness movement of the late 19th century.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. In The Christian's Secret, Hannah Whitall Smith wrote from her own experience as a middle-class American housewife of the 1870s for other women like herself. She discussed the trials and tribula-tions endured by mothers and homemakers (studiously avoiding the specific problems of women as wives),8 and consistently pre-

  4. 15 de oct. de 2015 · Sometimes our cruelest losses are the avenue to our greatest gains. For Hannah Whitall Smith, the loss of a five-year-old daughter finally unlocked the gates of heaven. Unable to bear the thought that the girl had gone into a cold, impersonal nothingness, she sought desperately for a ray of light.

  5. Hannah was the author of the spiritual classic, The Christian’s Secret of a Happy Life (1875) and later developed ideas on the final restitution of all things, diverted herself into social causes and writing. She produced The Unselfishness of God and How I Discovered It in 1903. A year later she was stricken with arthritis.

  6. Hannah was the author of the spiritual classic, The Christian's Secret of a Happy Life (1875) and later developed ideas on the final restitution of all things, diverted herself into social causes and writing.

  7. 30 de ago. de 2019 · Hannah Whitall Smith was a free-spirited product of Quakerism in the nineteenth century during a time of radical change in the Society of Friends. She was born in Philadelphia on February 7, 1832, and died in England on May 1, 1911.