Historic Meetinghouse

Flushing Quaker Meeting House

137-16 Northern Boulevard , Flushing, New York 11354

What are the characteristics of a Friends’ Meetinghouse? Comfort, quietness, simplicity. … How does memory carry me back to those houses of Friends, nestled near a piece of woods, showing a love of the beautiful and useful combined; and those noble trees that were of the primeval forest when the country was settled. How they awaken thoughts of the bygone days, when the fathers walked or stood under their shade, and gave each other the kindly greetings that Friends so truly give.

Isaiah Hicks
Old Westbury

Historic Flushing MeetinghouseThe Old Quaker Meeting House has been used by Flushing Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends as a house of worship for over 300 years. The house remains today much as when it was first built, with dark, warm floorboards, simple benches and hand-hewn timber ceiling beams. To step across the threshold is to leave the present behind and to enter a profoundly sacred space seasoned by centuries of devotion. To those who visit, the Meeting House is a peaceful reminder of an eventful and historic past.

Built in 1694 by John Bowne and other early Quakers, the Old Quaker Meeting House is, by all known accounts, the oldest house of worship in New York State and the second oldest Quaker meeting house in the nation. Visitors to the Meeting House have included George Washington, John Woolman and William Penn. The Meeting House is recognized as a rare example of ecclesiastical architecture and as a monument to an important event in the struggle for religious freedom in America, the Flushing Remonstrance, a document which is perhaps the earliest demand for religious freedom in America. The Meeting House also saw the beginnings of the abolitionist movement and the first school in Flushing. (For a more complete description of the Flushing Remonstrance and other important historical events, see Flushing Monthly Meeting History).

The Landmarks Preservation Commission described the Meeting House as “a prime example of medieval survival in its proportions and framing system. It is a plain rectangular building erected on a frame of forty-foot oak timbers, each hand hewn from a single tree. The architectural interest of the building is derived mainly from its unusually steep hipped roof; the roof is almost as high as the two stories below it. This feature can be traced to the high steep roofs of medieval Holland …. it stands today as a reminder of New York City’s earliest years and of the important contribution to the City made by the Society of Friends.” In its 1970 National Survey of Historic Sites and Buildings, the National Park Service wrote: ” The Old Quaker Meeting House … is the only surviving example in New York State of a typical 17th century ecclesiastical frame structure of medieval design.”

A lovely graveyard planted with indigenous trees and flowers is part of the Meeting House’s grounds. Although it is no longer used for interments, the burial ground is the final resting place for individuals and families who were prominent in Long Island history, including John Bowne and his family, the Leggett, Hicks and Wright families. (See Historic Graveyard.)

A National Historic Landmark and an Individual New York City Landmark, the Old Quaker Meeting House is also listed on the National Register of Historical Places.

In addition to meetings for worship every Sunday at 11:00 a.m., the Meeting House is open every Sunday from 12:00 to 12:30 p.m. for tours. All are welcome. Group tours can be scheduled for other days by appointment. The Meeting House is a popular stop along Flushing’s Freedom Mile and is visited by tourists, school children and Quakers from all over the world.

Here, in midst of the ambitious and rapidly growing business district of Flushing, the Meeting House stands as a peaceful reminder that there is more to strive for than wealth and fame. For 300 years, Flushing Meeting members have made history struggling against religious intolerance, slavery, injustice and violence. And here Flushing Meeting continues to work, hope, and pray for a peaceful, just world.

 

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