© Copyright Andrew Curtis and licensed for
reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
Quaker meeting
houses are thin on the ground here in the North-East, but the one to be found
at a remote spot a couple of miles east of Coanwood, Northumberland, is really
rather special. For it is one of the best examples of its kind anywhere of a Society
of Friends’ meeting house which has remained unaltered, internally, since its
18th century construction.
As a general rule
these sorts of places were almost all remodelled in the Victorian era, but not
so that at Coanwood – its remoteness no doubt helping it out in this respect.
It was built in 1760 under the directions of Cuthbert Wigham, a local landowner
and long-time Quaker, who had previously held meetings in his own house. Externally,
the building is of sturdy stone construction, with a roof of Welsh slate –
though it is thought this may have originally been heather thatched. Inside,
however, little has changed in over two-and-a-half centuries.
© Copyright Mike Quinn and licensed for
reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
Within its robust
outer shell can be found the simplest of layouts. Plain, open-backed pews face
onto a raised area at the front where Elders’ benches are situated facing out
over the congregation. At the rear is a movable screen designed to create a
second room if required (which is heated by a small fireplace) and the whole of
the interior is stone-flagged. Outside there is a small graveyard with the characteristically
small, rounded headstones of the Quaker type – including that of Cuthbert
Wigham, the house’s founder.
The meeting house
ceased operating as a Quaker chapel in 1960, but can usually be found open to
the passing public.