George Beaumont (minister)

According to an 1836 gazetteer, the Ebenezer Chapel in Norwich's Ber-Street was originally a Baptist meeting-house, and then was used by the Methodist New Connexion.

[2] When Beaumont wrote The warrior's looking glass of 1808, British pacifists, outside of the Society of Friends, were isolated.

[3] An article in the Monthly Repository in 1809, taking a cue from the recent abolition of the slave trade of 1807, and Thomas Clarkson's 1808 book on it, speculated on the abolition of war (attribution by Ceadel of a letter from "J. H." is to John Holland (1766–1826)).

[4] Also in 1809, in the Monthly Magazine, "H. W." (Henry Wansey, of Unitarian views) called for a peace association.

[5] David Bogue's "first clear call to form an organization on a pacifist basis" came in 1813.