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HomeMy WebLinkAboutX2023-013-048MEETI\GS IN ('-E\TRAL UPPER CANADA c)<, CJllcesslon.s in the latter directioIi were ever made in the con- struction of the Quaker meeting; houses of this period. The cemetery adjoining the meeting house on what was long known as "Quaker Hill,", ,c g was for cars used as �i ` ellel•al burying ground for tide district, and i�oids the dust of many of its first pioneers. Pickerin.a Amonc tine earliest settlers of Pickering Township were several who hay first gone toY once Street, most prominent amon^ triese mein_- Timoth,- I;,ogers, who was. therefore, the pioneer of two important h►uaker settlements in Upper Canada. gout 180�) '1 imothy removed with his f amil-- from Y onge Street to DufTin's Creel,, -where he operated what was probabl:- the first grist and saw mill in the township. It was built, lie tells us, "so that a boat could come three miles iron: the Lake, and land goods at my mill door". He also mentions the fine salmon which were caught near the mouth of the. creek, `- averaging seven to ten pounds, and some, he assures us. even twenty pounds. In 1809 and 1810 the settlements at Y onge Street and in Pickering Township were swept by an epidemic of sickness which took hells-; - toll of tiieir inhabitants. Five daughters of Timothy- Rogers —all married —died within a short, time of each other; and two sons —the one eighteen and the youngest nine --besides his son-in-law, Rufus Rogers, were also taker:. In addition Timothy Rogers mentions the fact that thirty friends who were personally* known to him, died about this time. He says of the epidemic, "that first it was called typhus fever, but iatterly we have had the measles, by which some have departed this life; but mostly it has been such an uncommon Disorder that it seems to baffle the skill of the wisest and best physicians". In 1810 Timothy Rogers went. back to the United States and returned with another company of settlers who were settled in Pickering Township, east of Duffin's Creek. For his services Timothy Rogers received a grant of several hundred acres of land near the 100 TIIP: QUAI{rRS IN CAJiADA, A HISTORY present village of Pickering.* In 1812 Timothy Rogers moved into a new house on his property near the village of Pickering. But this was a sad occasion, since just a short time before, his wife had been taken suddenly ill and had (lied at a friend's house. They had been journeying to York to buy some fur- nishings for the new home in which Sarah Rogers had hoped to spend in peace and comfort her declining years when death overtook her, leaving her husband with four young children. The Friends in Pickering Township first made a request for the privilege of holding a meeting for worship on First and Fourth Days, in 1810. Before granting this request a com- mittee was appointed by Yonge Street _Monthly Meeting which after visiting a number of the families, reported it as their judgment that "there was not yet a sufficient concern of mind amongst them to enable them to hold a meeting". In 1812 Yonge Street _Monthly _Meeting allowed an indulged meeting to be held at the house of .John Haight which was situated near the edge of what is now the village of Pickering. In 1814 Timothy Rogers gave Friends about seven acres of land for a meeting house and yard, being in lot number 13 in the fifth concession of Pickering Township. The first trustees of this property on behalf of the _Monthly Meeting were Wat- son Playter, Thomas Linville, Asa Rogers, -Nicholas Brown and James Varney. In the year 1819 a regular meeting for worship and a Preparative fleeting were established at Pickering, and in the same year the first meeting house was built. This building was used until 1833-4, when a new two story frame house, ;with galleries fifty feet by twenty-six feet, was begun. This structure was used until 1866-67, when it was replaced by a commodious red brick building which, in 1867, was the scene of the first independent Yearly Meeting of Orthodox Friends in Canada. In this way was fulfilled the prophetic vision of Timothy Rogers when, writing in 1809, he said: * W. R. Wood, Past Years in Pickering, pp. 15-19. _among the family names of the earliest Quaker pioneers in Pickering Township were : Rogers, Brown, Haight, Wright, Reason, Cornell, Taylor, Dale, Boone, Betts, Richardson, Hughes. the cer hw,, _1d An de: a S; of lIo esn thi= W. _ "1(; In :-hi indi .Itt.- Zhei the, reii,_ requ Ade the "1I01 T he Prer Prer and • MEETINGS IN CENTRAI. UPPER CANAnA 101 "This place, although very new, is about the centre of Friends in Upper Canada. I believe in time it will produce a Yearly Meeting within ten miles of this spot where I live on Dufiin's Creek."* Canada Half ]rear's Meeting By the end of the first quarter of the nineteenth century the Society of Friends was firmly established in the western, central and eastern districts of Upper Canada, where, as we have seen, three Monthly Meetings had grown up of Pelham, Adolphustown and Yonge Street. Evidence of the growing strength and confidence of the Society in Canada was the demand in 1808 to unite these three Monthly Meetings under a superior meeting of discipline in Canada, having the powers of a Quarterly 'Meeting. Friends in the last established Monthly Meeting at Yonge Street appear to have been especially active in promoting this change. As a result of this feeling, the mother Yearly Meetings of Philadelphia and of New York appointed a joint committee to visit the three Monthly Meetings in Canada to enquire into the situation. In 1809 this committee reported: "That seven of our members had visited all the meetings which constitute the three Monthly Meetings, except a small indulged meeting at Buff alow in the State of New York, and attended all the Monthly Meetings from whose accounts of their situations our sympathy was excited ; and although they appear to be in an infant state and the Monthly Meetings widely separated, yet we believe it would promote their religious improvement to grant them such a meeting as it requested, to be held alternately at West Lake, a branch of Adolphus and at Yonge Street .... to become a branch of the Yearly Meeting of New York, as the members of the three Monthly 'Meetings judge it best they should belong thereto. The Monthly Meeting of Adolphus is composed of three Preparatives, Kingston, Adolphus and West Lake ; Yonge Street of Queen Street and White Church ; Pelham of two Preparatives, viz., Black Creek and Pelham. The families and parts of families are in the whole rather upward of two Timothy Rogers' Journal. b— 146 THE QUAKERS IN CANADA. A HISTORY and Saviour Jesus Christ, his mediation and intercession foi us with tht Father, in the propitiatory sacrifice which he made on the cross when through the eternal spirit he offered himself without spot to God for the redemption of mankind. The disorganizing effect of these anti-Christian opinions have been sorrowfully manifested amongst us producing insubordination to our excellent discipline, and many of those who havr. been unhappily ensnared by these delusive strategems of the enemy have been gradually led on from one degree of disorder to another until at length they have openly gone out from our Society and set up meetings of their own contrary to the good order and discipline established amongst us in the wisdom of truth. Aside from the controversial character of the above statement itself and the aspersions it cast upon many promi- nent leaders in the Society, the Hicksite sympathizers in Pickering Meeting refused to recognize the authority of that section of the Yearly Meeting which had issued the statement. The Orthodox party, therefore, on the ground that the pre- siding Clerk (Nicholas Austin) and his supporters were "rejecting the authority of our discipline and casting off the subordination and restraint which is due that body" (namely, the "Orthodox" New York Yearly Meeting), took matters into their own hands and appointed a new Clerk of the Preparative Meeting in the person of William Wright. t At a subsequent Preparative Meeting held at Pickering in Ninth Month, 1828, the Orthodox party disowned Nicholas : Minutes of Pickering Preparative Meeting, 7/8/1828. t "A considerable number of the members of this Preparative Meet- ing have united themselves in principle to those who have thus separated from our religious society and identified themselves with them at Pickering Preparative Meeting, Seventh Day of the Eighth Month, 1828, by refusing to have the minute of advice and direction from our late Yearly Meeting of Friends held in New York read or to acknowledge its committee, therebv rejecting the authority of our discipline and casting off the subordination and respect which is due that body. And the Clerk of this Preparative Meeting having joined in these irregular and disorderly letters, it became the duty of those Friends who remained attached to the ancient doctrines and discipline of our religious society, after testifying against these pro- ceedings, to appoint a Clerk and maintain Pickering preparative Meetingi according to the original design of its establishment (to wt) as a Pre - Friends, Meeting of the religious Society of Friends, and part of and subordinate to the aforesaid regulacomponent r and ancient Yearly Meet- ing of New York." —Minutes of Pickering Preparative Meeting, 7/8/1828. SEPARAT Brown, an acknowledg been prominent in the New York Yearly M( several years previous t Elias Hicks.* As prey Brown who had, in all Shillitoe at Yonge Stre( 1827. Soon after the 4 fifteen outstanding Hi( against and eventually Faction and party whole Society in Can, occurred comparable i Meetings, it was a suff divided against itself. hold their Preparative ering, Nicholas Bron, admittance to the buil( to retire to "the sch( Timothy Rogers ", an season. Eventuallv U. of the building and gr( were compelled to ac( about two miles furth where a substantial brie Trouble seems to Monthly Meeting, whit 1828. The same threw Yearly Meeting (Orth( also present at Bloom "Janney, History of Fr Vol. iv, p. 247. t Joel Hughes, James Joseph Brown, Silas Orvis, James Webster, Roland Br Aaron Bunnel.—Minutes o $ Thomas Linville, Me the minutes (Orthodox) rep Friends." —West Lake Moi jLPARATION OF 1828 IN C:LiVl�DA i4 7 �3rown, an acknowledged minister of this meetin who had -- been prominent in the separation which had taken place in New York Yearly Meeting in Fifth Month, and who for several years previous to tills had been closely associated with Elias Hicks.* 3s previously noted it was the same Nicholas Brown who had, in all probability, publicly opposed Thomas Shillitoe at Yonge Street Monthly Meeting in Second Month, 1827. Soon after the disownment of Nicholas Brown about fifteen outstanding Hicksite supporters were also proceeded against and eventually disowned. i Faction and party strife now broke loose throughout the wnole Society in Canada, and while no scenes of disorder occurred comparable to those in several of the American Meetings, it was a sufficiently lamentable example of a house divided against itself. When the Orthodox party tried to Bold their Prep"rative Meeting in the Meeting House at Pick- ering, Nicholas Brown, who was caretaker, refused them admittance to the building. They were, therefore, compelled to retire to "the school house on Friends' West Lot near Timothy Rogers", and to hoid their meetings there for season. Eventually the Orthodox party regained possession ui the building and grounds, whereupon the Hicksite Friends were compelled to acquire a new Meeting T�iouse property about two miles further east along the main Kingston road, -where a substantial brick Meeting House was eventually built. 'rouble seems to have broken out next in West Lake Monthly Meeting, which met at Bloomfield, in Eighth Month, S2S. The same three official representatives of New York Yearly Meeting (Orthodox) who had been at Pickering were aiso present at Bloomfield. + There was likewise present at *.Tanney, History of Friends, op. cit., vol. iv, pp. a89-tW :also � bid, oi. iv, p. t47. Y Joel Hughes, .Tames Starr, Abraham Brown, James Carpenter, Joseph Brown, Silas Orvis, Eleazer Orvis, Nicholas Austin, James Brown, ames Webster, Roland Brown, Ira Brown. Silvanus Brown, .Tames Eves, _baron Bunnel.—Minutes of Pickering Preparative Meeting, 11,' 9 % 18Q8. + Thomas Linville, Mead Attwater, Michael Robson, whose presence .he minutes (Orthodox) record "has been a strength and satisfaction tc _�riends."—JVest Lake :Monthly .Meeting, 21!8/1828. 174 THE QUAKERS IN CANADA, A HISTORY THE "Hlcxsl, Street Monthly Meeting. He had joined Friends before he Monthly Meetings, that came to Canada, about 1804; and in 1834 his gift in the ministry was acknowledged by his Monthly Meeting which he Canada Half Year's Me continued to serve faithfully until the time of his death in membership joined to th; In 1840 Freeman Clarke, 1865. in Haldimand, moved t( Pickering Monthly Meeting this branch of the Society At Uxbridge and at Pickering, as the Orthodox Friends au year HalCa aPre: authority of Canadd a Hal : were in control, they retained the meeting house and property. Consequently a new meeting house main centre of the Hick was eventually built by Hicksite Friends at both of these places. The meeting house tipper Canada was in Pri Lake, at Pickering was built about 1834. It was struck by lightning and West at which alternately for the next and completely destroyed (about 1876), but replaced by a substantial brick edifice which stood on the north side membership of West La: of the Kingston Road, two and a half miles east of Pickering village. reported one hundred an, Though the records show, The meeting house at Uxbridge was not built until about 1844. In 1842 Canada Half Year's Meeting these accessions never m reorganized Uxbridge and Pickering as "Pickering Monthly- Meeting", which was held in removal to other distric First Day School organi2 alternate months at these two points. The scattering of the many years. The grade ,younger people into other districts, and the gradual decline of Pickering Monthly Meeting, made necessary further finally led to the laying reorganiza- tion, when in 1886 Pickering was changed from a Monthly to an this place (1873) and t. Meeting hereafter at Blo Executive Meeting. This change made possible the holding of About 1834 or 1835, the meetings at less frequent intervals than once every month for the transaction of what little business secured from Stephen W required to be done. At the present there are no active meetings of this branch of which was situated in lo, of the Township of Hall( Friends either at Uxbridge or at Pickering. of the village of Bloomfie! a mile above the origin, West Lake Monthly Meeting been held by the Ortho In West Lake Monthly Meeting the Hicksite Friends, meen oblo The new ng frame lding, while numerically stronger than in Yonge Street, were still in a decided across he front, and t minority, so that, with the exception of the Green Point Meeting House, they lost control of which, except for the a€ practically all the property in this Monthly Meeting. In fact so few of the bering either up to or do wagons, called "democr. Hicksite Friends remained in Cold Creek and in Ameliasburg Preparative Meetings, in days. Behind the meetii and Leeds and Adolphustown sheds for the horses, ai