Citations:Wilkinsonianism

the religious beliefs and practices of the Public Universal Friend (Jemima Wilkinson) and the Society of Universal Friends

 * c. 1831-34, Thomas Campbell, letter to Sidney Rigdon, published in 1834, E. D. Howe, Mormonism Unvailed, page 120:
 * This proposition, clearly and fully established, as I believe it most certainly can be, we have no more need for Quakerism, Shakerism, Wilkinsonianism, Buchanism, Mormonism, or any other ism, than we have for three eyes, three ears ...
 * 2017, Adam Jortner, Blood from the Sky: Miracles and Politics in the Early American Republic, University of Virginia Press (ISBN 9780813939599):
 * If Wilkinsonianism moved toward generic Protestantism between 1800 and 1819, then fewer miracles and wonder-workings might be expected.
 * 2020, Spencer W. McBride, Brent M. Rogers, Keith A. Erekson, Contingent Citizens: Shifting Perceptions of Latter-day Saints in American Political Culture, Cornell University Press (ISBN 9781501716744), page 19:
 * While religion could be pluralistic in Thomas Jefferson&#39;s America, superstition could not. These legal imbroglios appear to have worked: Wilkinsonianism, Cochranism, Osgoodism, and the New Israelitism did not survive the nineteenth century.