The Sandwich Quaker Meeting was first gathered on 13 April 1657 at the home of William Allen on Spring Hill Road in East Sandwich, about 500 yards from the present meeting house. Among the attendees was Nicholas Upsall who had been expelled from Boston for his heretical beliefs. By 1658 there were sixteen Quaker families in Sandwich, meeting secretly to avoid punishment. But in 1694 the town granted the Quakers land on Spring Hill for a burial ground and meetinghouse. This structure was built in 1810. Today it is considered the home of the oldest continuous Quaker meeting in America.
This building was originally made on the Kennebec River in Maine and
shipped to Sandwich. It was reassembled
according to the numbered timbers. There
are original carriage sheds on each side of the meetinghouse, and the privies
behind were used until 1992 when the community house was connected to the town
water. The burial ground is behind the
meetinghouse, but the earliest burials were unmarked by gravestones. There is no known record of early burials.
Around this meetinghouse there was a large Quaker village
with a Quaker school, the Wing and Hoxie family homesteads (now museum houses
open to the public in the summer), and homes of other early Quaker families. Surnames
include Bowman, Crocker, Holway, Gifford, Jones, Ewer, West, Russell and
others. The Religious Society of Friends
is still continuing services at this meetinghouse, and worship is 10am every
Sunday. Visitors are welcome.
For the truly curious:
East Sandwich Friends Meeting House6 Quaker Road
East Sandwich, Massachusetts 02537
Sandwich Monthly Meeting history webpage (from the Cape Cod
Quakers website): http://www.capecodquakers.org/smm_history.html
A listing of burials in Sandwich Quaker Cemetery http://www.capecodgravestones.com/sandquaker.html
“The Quaker Way of Life”, Cape Cod Times, 20 August
2007, https://www.capecodtimes.com/article/20070820/news/708200318
No comments:
Post a Comment