Fair 55.0°F Fair [Forecast] :: Saturday, November 21st, 2009
Vacation Info Wedding Info Kids/Parents NEW! Pets

Cape Cod History

Your mirror on Olde Cape Cod
Please visit these local CapeCodToday sponsors:
ServPro of Upper Cape Cod & The Islands
Specializes in the cleanup and restoration of residential & commercial property after a fire, smoke, or water damage situation as well as mold remediation. When fire & water take control of your life, we help you take it back. (Bourne)
Mashpee Family Medicine
Established in 1984, we are a primary care /walk-in clinic which provides the highest standard of clinical care to our patients plus a warm welcome. Our patients are part of our family. Full lab and x-ray facility on the premises. (Mashpee)

1654; Plymouth Court clamps down on Quakers en route to Sandwich

On this day in 1658, "Plymouth Court ordered that any boat carrying Quakers to Sandwich be seized to prevent the religious heretics from landing.

d-.quakermeetinghouse_335
Although Quakers probably worshipped in Yarmouth as early as 1659, there is no record of a Quaker Meeting House being built until 1714. This early Meeting House was located on the Dennis side of Bass River. (The site is now owned and maintained by the Town of Dennis.) When the Indian Lands in Yarmouth opened for settlement, the Kelley family purchased much of the land and began a new village. Prominent in the Quaker community, David Kelley encouraged other Quakers to move across Bass River and offered a portion of his land to the Religious Society of Friends for the building of a new meeting house. Completed in 1809, the Quaker Meeting House in the old photo above looks much today as it did then, austere and simple, lacking ornamentation or religious symbols.
s-quaker_meetinghouse2_280Sandwich meetinghouse on Spring Hill in East Sandwich is home of the oldest Quaker meeting in America. It was gathered here on 13 April, 1657. This was the site of some of the first Quarterly meetings in America, in 1680..

A year earlier, Quakers in Sandwich had established the first Friends' Meeting in the New World.

Magistrates in both Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies were alarmed by Quaker teachings that individuals could receive direct personal revelations from God.

"To protect orthodox Puritanism, the courts passed a series of laws forbidding residents from housing Quakers. Quakers themselves were threatened with whipping, arrest, imprisonment, banishment or death. But driven by conscience, some Quakers repeatedly returned to Massachusetts to preach; four of them, including Mary Dyer, went to the gallows before a shocked King Charles ordered an end to the hanging of Quakers in 1661 ..." - as described at Mass Moments, a website maintained by the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities.

The photo on right shows the East Sandwich Friends Meeting House on Spring Hill road off Route 6A. Built in 1810, it is the third incarnation of the oldest Quaker Meeting House in continuous use in North America. Services are held every Sunday at 11 a.m.

(photo credit, The Historical Society of Old Yarmouth and Cape Cod Quakers.)

1 comment
Blog posts and comments are entirely the thoughts and ideas of the people who write them and in no way represent the views of CapeCodToday.com, eCape, Inc., or its employees or owners.

12/03/07 @ 9:23 pm
Monponsett [Member] writes:
The Quakers quickly struck back by cornering the American oatmeal market.
Please visit these local CapeCodToday sponsors:
DesignBuildCapeCod.Com
An architecturally inspired design build collaborative of an architect, a builder, and a landscaper which offers an all-in-one solution to your home design needs. (Yarmouth)
Curves of Cape Cod
Curves is a facility specially designed for women featuring a complete 30 minute workout. You can burn over 500 calories in one strength training workout! New 30 Day Diet Plan. Lose weight and keep it off! Five convenient Cape locations.
IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR COMMENTORS & BLOGGERS: CapeCodToday now requires a one-time validation of your account email. When logging in or registering for the first time, you will be emailed a link to click that will validate your email and complete your login. The link in the email must be clicked in the same session when you are logged into the site for security purposes (i.e. retrieve the email right away and do not close your web browser).

This is a one-time-only process (or if you change the email on your account), and will help CCToday keep out the spammers. If you cannot validate your email because it is invalid, and you are a legitimate user, feel free to contact us and we will update your account to your current email.

Please Login or Register to leave a comment. There are 3,363 registered commenters!

CapeCodToday requires readers register an account with us in order to post comments. Become a trusted commenter and receive the benefits of posting instantly throughout the site. It's quick and easy!

Please note: If you are a CapeCodToday registered blogger, you can use your blogger login. Your login for the blogs is separate from your CapeCodToday main site login (if you have one).

Previous/Next posts in this blog

About This Blog

2dayoncc_140If it's local, and it happened today, we want you to know about it.
Send your suggestions for an event which happened in the past on Cape Cod and we'll probably use it for this series.
Send an email here.

- site sponsors -


CCT Blog Tools

Login to comment or manage your blog:

Username: 

Password:     

Become a CapeCodToday Blogger!

Are you passionate about your community? Do you blog or at least harbor thoughts of doing so?

If so, CapeCodToday.com would like to host your blog on our CapeCodToday weblog publishing platform.

Blog Newsfeed

CapeCodToday uses standard web "newsfeeds" (RSS) to automatically update the latest blog entries in your browser or newsreader.

Use any of the links below in your newsreader or web browser to get "Cape Cod History" postings delivered to you, or use the RSS icon in your browser's address bar.

RSS 2.0 Atom 0.3