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Alastair Heron (1915 – 17 March 2009)[1] was a British psychologist and writer. A member of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, he wrote a number of books and pamphlets on Quakers in Britain.

Quaker works

Heron was a member of Balby Monthly Meeting, and attended Sheffield Central Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends. In 1986 he spent nine weeks traveling in the ministry in Australia, and three years later did the same coast-to-coast in Canada.

His first Quaker book, Caring, Conviction, Commitment, was published in 1992. It resulted from the survey he carried out in Yorkshire to learn at first hand of the experiences of attenders from the time of their first entry into a Quaker meeting. In 1994, he published a small dictionary, Quaker Speak, as one of his responses to the needs discovered in the Yorkshire survey. In 1996 his major work, Quakers in Britain; a century of change, was the only book to mark the centenary of the Manchester Conference that had opened the way for what later became known as the 'liberal stage' in British Quaker history. Abstracted from it came The British Quakers: 1647 to 1997, a (first modern) introduction to inform newcomers. His autobiography, Only One Life: A Quaker's Voyage was published in 1998.

List of books and pamphlets by year

Biography

For thirty years Heron was research psychologist working mainly in the field of human development through the life span, and in cross-cultural studies.

In the early 1970s, he was professor and head of department of psychology in the University of Melbourne, Australia.[4]

He and his wife Margaret reached their sixtieth wedding anniversary in November 2000, less than a year before her death at 88. His son and daughter live in England and the US respectively, and Alastair was a great-grandfather.

References

  1. ^ "Australian Psychological Society : Obituaries". Archived from the original on 16 May 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2009.
  2. ^ "Author Search : Alastair Heron". Librarycat.org. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Alastair Heron : 1915 – 2009". Quakersintheworld.org. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Friend Alastair Heron 1916-2009". The Australian Friend. 6 May 2013. Retrieved 8 June 2022.