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Rachel Davis DuBois of New
York Yearly Meeting traveling in the field for FGC, 1960. In the
1950s and 60s,FGC’s services to meetings included sponsoring Rachel
Davis DuBois’“Quaker Dialogues,” to help meetings develop deeper
sharing among members. From 1958–1964, Rachel Davis DuBois led
dialogues in over 300 meetings.After that time, the Religious
Life Committee, which was established in 1963 to support the spiritual
life of meetings, inherited the program.
Above: Poster for the General Conference in Traverse City, Michigan,
1963.

Maps showing the geographic growth of Friends General Conference,
ca. 1984.
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When FGC was organized in 1900, it was made
up of seven yearly meetings, extending from the northeast—New York,
Philadelphia and Baltimore-to the upper midwest—Ohio (later laid down),
Indiana, Illinois and Genesee Yearly Meeting (western New York state
and Ontario, Canada). A hundred years later FGC is affiliated with fourteen
yearly meetings and associations covering the eastern half of the United
States and all of Canada, with a small but lively west coast anchor
in Alaska.
How did this growth come about? The answer lies largely in the “independent
meeting movement,” which began in the 1920s and 1930s, and is still
going strong. “Independent” meetings are those for whom the nineteenth
century Quaker schisms simply have no meaning. They are not “Hicksite”
like the six yearly meetings that gave rise to FGC or “Gurneyite” like
pastoral meetings of Friends United Meeting (FUM) and the Evangelical
Friends International. They are not “Wilburite” like the independent
“conservative” yearly meetings that separated from the Gurneyites over
issues of written creed and programmed worship. Virtually all of the
independent meetings of the twentieth century practice unprogrammed
worship. They find God in the living silence. They know Quakerism experientially,
not on the basis of tradition and established practice. They are inclined
to fiercely protect the flame they have lighted from outside interference.
But they are not separate from the larger body of the Religious Society
of Friends. The independent meeting movement in the 1930s resulted mainly
from increased geographic mobility among Friends, especially those involved
in education. Quaker teachers or students transplanted to a college
town with no meeting (or no unprogrammed meeting) nearby, might very
well look for other Quakers interested in holding a silent meeting for
worship. A cluster of a few families or committed individuals is all
that is needed to start a worship group, which may blossom into an established
meeting. From Cambridge, Massachusetts to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and in
dozens of smaller communities in between, college meetings took firm
root in the 1930s. Retirees and other Quaker migrants in some of the
southern states played a similar role in seeding new meetings.
Often these small meetings or worship groups receive invaluable assistance
from larger Quaker bodies. In 1930 AFSC created what became known as
the “Fellowship Committee” expressly to nurture independent meetings.
The plan was to correspond with and officially recognize meetings that
had no yearly meeting affiliation, thus giving their members membership
in the Religious Society of Friends. Although AFSC regional staff was
in a good position to get to know independent meetings in their area,
not all Friends were convinced that AFSC had the standing or the right
to concern itself with membership issues. In the mid-1930s Rufus Jones
undertook to shift this responsibility from AFSC to a nominally independent
Fellowship Council. From 1937 on, the Fellowship Council shared office
space and staff with the newly created Friends World Committee for Consultation
(Section of the Americas), which subsequently took over formal responsibility
for its work.
Friends General Conference was also interested in reaching out to independent
meetings. Barnard Walton, who served as FGC’s general and “advancement”
secretary from 1915 to 1951, traveled tirelessly, seeking out isolated
Friends and new meetings as well as those affiliated with FGC. After
his retirement in 1951 he became a traveling field secretary for FGC.
His repeated visits to new meetings in Florida, three of which had been
established in the 1940s under the care of the Friends World Committee,
helped bring Southeastern Yearly Meeting into being in 1962. His contribution
is commemorated in the annual Walton lecture.
In 1971 when Southeastern Yearly Meeting finally chose to affiliate
with a larger Quaker body, it chose dual affiliation with FGC and FUM.
Only dual affiliation could adequately capture both the sense of independence
and the range of concerns within the new yearly meeting. This ecumenical
impulse is typical of the entire independent meeting movement, and it
has had profound consequences for FGC. In 1900, FGC was an organization
of Hicksite yearly meetings (with distinct progressive overtones). By
now it is something entirely different, and the independent meetings
are the primary cause.
In 1944 Cambridge Friends Meeting became FGC’s first new affiliate.
Cambridge was itself a combined meeting. It began in 1910, when Friends
General Conference brought together about thirty transplanted Friends
from FGC yearly meetings who were living in the Boston area. The unprogrammed
meeting for worship thus established also attracted quite a few refugees
from the Gurneyite Boston Friends Meeting, which had become increasingly
evangelical and resistant to lay participation over the previous two
decades. The resulting group was clear that it was neither Hicksite,
nor Gurneyite, but some combination of the two. In 1937 Cambridge created
its own non-profit corporation to hold property for the meeting, and
to give it a legal identity. When the Fellowship Council offered to
extend recognition to Cambridge Meeting in 1940, the offer was refused.
Cambridge Friends felt no need to be recognized by any outside authority,
or to affiliate with any established Friends body, in order to justify
its existence.
Cambridge Meeting did not, however, want to be separate from the larger
world of the Religious Society of Friends. Very active in AFSC projects
and peace work, cosmopolitan in outlook as a result of diverse membership,
Cambridge Friends played a key role in the ecumenical movement which
resulted in 1944 in the creation of a united New England Yearly Meeting,
combining both the old Gurneyite (programmed) and Wilburite (conservative)
yearly meetings, with the strong independent monthly meetings in Providence,
New Haven, the Connecticut Valley and Cambridge. In that same year,
Cambridge completed its formal merger with Boston Monthly Meeting. But
being part of a united Gurneyite/Wilburite Yearly Meeting did not completely
express Cambridge Meetings sense of ecumenical identify. It also affiliated,
independently and directly, with Friends General Conference.
In the midwest the same kind of ecumenical spirit surrounded the creation
of Lake Erie Yearly Meeting. Lake Erie had its beginnings in 1939, as
an informal association of about a dozen unprogrammed worship groups,
mostly in Ohio and Michigan, an area formerly served by Ohio Yearly
Meeting (Hicksite), one of the founding members of the FGC. But Ohio
Yearly Meeting had dwindled and died a decade or two earlier, and these
meetings were not Hicksite, but independent. They were mostly in college
towns. Many were nurtured by the Fellowship Council, and came under
the care of the Friends World Committee after 1937. By the 1950s the
Lake Erie Association included meetings ranging from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
to West Lafayette, Indiana and from Morgantown, West Virginia to Kalamazoo,
Michigan.
In 1957 several meetings in Michigan, including Ann Arbor, Detroit
and Kalamazoo, organized themselves into Green Pastures Quarter, under
the care of Friends World Committee, and began seeking ways to fit themselves
into the ongoing concerns of the Religious Society of Friends. In this
they received support from the Ohio office of the American Friends Service
Committee, where Marshall Sutton was exploring ways to encourage ecumenical
dialogue among Friends. The result was the Continuing Committee on Greater
Unity, which brought together Friends from Wilmington Yearly Meeting
(FUM), Ohio Yearly Meeting (Conservative), Indiana Yearly Meeting (FGC),
and the Lake Erie Association.
For the next several years the Continuing Committee organized activities
to bring Friends together across yearly meeting dividing lines. Peter
Blood, whose family was active in Ann Arbor Meeting, recalls these get-togethers
fondly. During a family camp at Barnesville, Ohio in the summer of 1961,
he remembers, the evening folk dances, which were a tradition of Lake
Erie Association gatherings, had to be called “folk games” out of deference
to the Conservative Friends testimony against dancing.
Out of this ecumenical ferment, Lake Erie Yearly Meeting was born.
Friends in the Lake Erie Association had gotten to know and appreciate
the several yearly meetings in their region, but none fully suited them.
They were not Gurneyite, or Hicksite, or Wilburite, but something new
and different. They needed their own yearly meeting, reflecting the
energy and spirit of the independent meeting movement. In 1963, most
of the meetings of the Lake Erie Association joined the newly created
Lake Erie Yearly Meeting. Four years later LEYM affiliated with FGC.
The ease with which this decision was reached reflected, in part, changes
in FGC. New England Yearly Meeting, following the lead of Cambridge,
affiliated with FGC in 1959, while maintaining the conviction that its
primary identification was with Friends United Meeting. Baltimore and
New York Yearly Meetings were also newly reunited, and maintaining dual
affiliations with FGC and FUM. South Central Yearly meeting, covering
a vast area in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana, affiliated in
1962, anchoring FGC in the heart of the continent. By the mid-1960s
FGC was far less parochial than it had once been, in terms of both theology
and geography. It was no longer simply a Hicksite organization, and
it was no longer confined to a small area radiating from Philadelphia.
From 1963 on off-year conferences were held in the midwest or southwest,
to express this new sense of identity.
By 1980 FGC had added five more yearly meetings or associations with
roots in the independent meeting movement: Southeastern Yearly Meeting
(1972); Piedmont Friends Fellowship (1975); Northern Yearly Meeting
(1979); Southern Appalachian Yearly Meeting and Association (1979);
and Alaska Friends Conference (1979). In two of these instances, independent
monthly meetings (Twin Cities and Friendship) had joined as directly
affiliated meetings before their yearly meetings were organized or ready
to affiliate. There are at present eight directly affiliated monthly
meetings, in South Carolina, Kansas, California and Washington state,
and the possibility that these will pave the way to further affiliations.
I would like to point out two major lessons that can be drawn from
this story of affiliation over the years. First, affiliation with FGC
often grows out of the ecumenical yearnings of Friends. Meetings do
not come to affiliation out of a desire to separate themselves from
other branches of Quakerism. Meetings come wanting to express their
own true identity, which usually includes ties and formal affiliations
with several different branches. Often, as in the case of Cambridge
and Green Pastures Quarter, they come only after an intense period of
building bridges and engaging with Friends of various persuasions and
practices. The more ecumenical FGC becomes, and the more it supports
and encourages bridge building and dialogue, the more likely it is to
grow. But surface ecumenism is not enough. The independent meeting movement
has fostered meetings hungry for real, vital, living Quakerism. The
desire to build bridges grows out of a deeply felt need to engage with
basic questions of faith and spiritual growth. This is a challenge all
of us should embrace with joy.
The second lesson is that FGC has changed profoundly over the years,
and that it will certainly change more. This is due in part to an influx
of new seekers (even in Philadelphia Yearly Meeting “convinced” Friends
now outnumber those born to Quaker parents) and in part to the spiritual
revitalization movement now transforming liberal Quakerism across the
country. But the independent meeting movement has also played an important
role within the older yearly meetings as well as in the newer ones.
FGC has grown and changed as it has embraced an increasing number of
independent meetings monthly and yearly meetings. One barrier to affiliation
has always been a fear of falling under the sway of “Philadelphia Quakerism,”
but FGC has not been dominated by an old east coast Quaker elite for
decades. Since at least the 1970s much of the leadership has come from
the newer formerly independent yearly meetings. The vitality and spirit
of the independent meeting movement, the sense of coming to Quakerism
fresh and untrammeled, is very much alive in Central Committee and among
the FGC staff.
A quotation from Rufus Jones, lifted up in the first session of the
new Lake Erie Yearly Meeting, captures this vision:
The “open” type of religion for which I am pleading, the movement-type,
is uncongealed, fresh, free, formative, and in vital contact with
the creative stream of divine life.
This is the spirit of the independent meeting movement, and, I think,
the spirit of FGC today. May we honor it and follow wherever it may
lead.
Deborah Haines, clerk of FGC’s Advancement and Outreach Committee
credits “The Modernist Revolution of Quakerism: The Independent Meetings
in New England, 1920–1950,” Betsy Cazden’s masters thesis, as a major
source for this article.
Related:
Benefits of Affiliation with FGC
Processes and Procedures for a Monthly
Meeting to Affiliate with FGC
Processes and Procedures for a Yearly
Meeting to Affiliate with FGC