Boston Monthly Meeting of Friends Records
Although Quakers first worshipped in Boston in 1661, they were late in the game in organizing a formal meeting. A preparative meeting operated in the city for just over a hundred years (1707-1808) under the auspices of the Salem Monthly Meeting, and a second attempt at building a community began in 1870 with authorization of an indulged meeting in Roxbury. Set off formally as the Boston Monthly Meeting Friend in 1883, this meeting continued until 1944, when it merged with an independent meeting in neighboring Cambridge to create the current Friends Meeting at Cambridge.
The records in this collection offer thorough documentation of the Boston Monthly Meeting of Friends from its establishment as an indulged meeting in 1870 through to its merger in 1944 and change of name to the Friends Meeting at Cambridge. In addition to the meeting minutes, the collection includes substantial records of the monthly’s Friends Guild and Women’s Foreign Missionary Society.
Background on Boston Monthly Meeting of Friends
Although Quakers arrived in Boston at a remarkably early date, 1656, and held their first meeting there in 1661, they were late in the game in organizing a formal meeting. Small meetings for worship gathered in the city for several decades under the care of Salem Monthly Meeting, and despite the best attempts of colonial officials to hamper spread of the faith, they coalesced into a Preparative Meeting in 1707. The capitol of Congregationalism, however, never became a Quaker hotbed, and after a century of survival, the Boston Preparative meeting was officially laid down in 1808.
Quakerism returned to Boston in 1870, when a group of Friends based primarily in Roxbury petitioned Salem Monthly to authorize a new indulged meeting which became the core of the Boston Monthly Meeting of Friends when it was set off officially in 1883. A success, relatively speaking, this Meeting stewarded a preparative meeting in Lawrence in 1886, which was formally set off as a monthly of its own thirteen years later. In 1926, Boston Friends began meeting jointly with an independent meeting in Cambridge and the two merged in 1944 to create the current Friends Meeting at Cambridge: technically, the Cambridge independent meeting was laid down and its members accepted into Boston.
Since that time, two additional monthly meetings have been formed in the area: Beacon Hill (set off in 1958) and Fresh Pond (1991).
Scope of collection
The records in this collection offer thorough documentation of the Boston Monthly Meeting of Friends from its establishment as an indulged meeting in 1870 through to its merger in 1944 and change of name to the Friends Meeting at Cambridge. In addition to the meeting minutes, the collection includes substantial records of the monthly’s Friends Guild and Women’s Foreign Missionary Society, and less thorough, but interesting materials for the Young Peoples Society for Christian Endeavor and the Quaker Broad-Brim, a self-produced journal from a young people’s literary society.
Records for the meeting after merger with the Cambridge Independent meeting are housed with the records of the Friends Meeting at Cambridge.
Inventory
(11:A6)
reports
Boston
Administrative information
Access
The collection is open for research.
Provenance
Gift of the New England Yearly Meeting of Friends Records, March 2016.
Related Material
This collection is part of the New England Yearly Meeting Records.
Bibliography
Selleck, George, Quakers in Boston, 1656-1964: Three Centuries of Friends in Boston and Cambridge. Cambridge, Mass.: Friends Meeting at Cambridge, 1976
Processing Information
Processed by I. Eliot Wentworth, October 2018.
Language:
English
Copyright and Use (More information )
Cite as: Boston Monthly Meeting of Friends Records (MS 902 b678). Special Collections and University Archives, University of Massachusetts Amherst Libraries.
Search terms
Subjects
- Boston (Mass.)–Religious life and customs
- Quakers–Massachusetts
- Society of Friends–Massachusetts
Names
- New England Yearly Meeting of Friends
Genre terms
- Minutes (Administrative records)
- Newsletters