• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Map
  • Book
  • Prayer

Sacred Spaces of New England

Places that elicit contemplation, reflection and inspiration.

  • Connecticut
  • Maine
  • Massachusetts
  • New Hampshire
  • Rhode Island
  • Vermont

Quaker

Dover Friends Meetinghouse, Dover, New Hampshire

1 Comment

Loading…

Click here to view the 360-degree panoramic image together with Google Cardboard and your iPhone, or to view it fullscreen on your iPhone.

Built in 1768, the Dover Friends Meetinghouse is the oldest surviving 18th century Quaker meetinghouse in the state of New Hampshire. The Quaker movement in Dover began with the arrival of three Quaker English women missionaries in 1662. Met with strong resistance from Puritan officials, they persevered establishing a congregation in 1680. The Dover Religious Society of Friends’ current meetinghouse and their two previous meetinghouses, have not only been used for religious gatherings, but have served as a meeting place for such social and political activities as the plight against slavery. The congregation aspires to continue this practice “on behalf of peace and nonviolence, social, racial, and sexual equality; simplicity and honesty; and, in recent years, environmental awareness.”

141 Central Avenue
Dover, New Hampshire

Filed Under: New Hampshire Tagged With: Meetinghouse, Quaker, Vernacular

Conanicut Friends Meetinghouse, Jamestown, Rhode Island

Leave a Comment

Loading…

Click here to view the 360-degree panoramic image together with Google Cardboard and your iPhone, or to view it fullscreen on your iPhone.

The Conanicut Friends Meeting was established in 1684 due to the growing Quaker population in Jamestown. Built in 1786, the simple rectangular shingled meetinghouse was constructed after the original one was destroyed by the British in 1776. According to traditional practice, the Quakers worship in silence together. Though there may be elders in the facing benches to manage the service, there is no preacher, as members reach for “that of God” within them individually and only speak when they have something to share with the others. The meetinghouse provides physical remnants of past practices with its two separate entrances and two hinged wide-board partitions that could be lowered so that men and women would have the ability to have separate business meetings. In all of its simplicity, the intentionally plain and purposeful building acts as a testament to the philosophy and principles of the Quakers.

North Road & Weeden Lane
Jamestown, RI 02835

Filed Under: Rhode Island Tagged With: Meetinghouse, Quaker

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to the Sacred Spaces of New England Newsletter:



Tags

Baptist Baroque Byzantine Byzantine Romanesque Carpenter Gothic Catholic Chapel Chautauqua Church Classical Revival Colonial Congregational English Gothic Episcopal Federal Style Georgian Gothic Revival Gothic Style Greek Revival High Victorian Gothic Islam Italianate Italian Renaissance Style Lutheran Meetinghouse Methodist Modern Mosque Multi-Denominational Multipurpose Muslim Nondenominational Orthodox Christianity Presbyterian Quaker Queen Anne Reform Judaism Richardsonian Romanesque Romanesque Romanesque Revival Secular Shingle Style Synagogue Unitarian Universalist Vernacular

Recent Additions

  • Saint Joseph Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Holy Trinity Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Saint George Greek Orthodox Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • The First Church of Deerfield, Deerfield, Massachusetts
  • Uxbridge Friends Meetinghouse, Uxbridge, Massachusetts

Copyright © 2012–2025 - Seth Thompson