© Copyright Carol Rose
and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence
The first Quaker Meeting House proper to be
built in the settlement of Norton was on the site of the current affair in the
year 1671. Much altered over the years, the present structure dates from 1903
when it was rebuilt in the style of the original building.
What is remarkable, though, is how the
religious body itself has managed to survive at all. Whilst some sources refer
to the town’s ‘comparatively peaceful history’, the Quakers have suffered
anything but a quiet existence there. Born around the time of the English Civil
War, the Quaker movement made enemies of both Roundhead and Royalist alike –
though the former tolerated them due to Quaker sympathies among their foot
soldiers.
On the Restoration in 1660, there was a
severe clamp-down on the activities of the ‘obstinate men and women’ of the
parish ‘who would not let down their conventicles’. King Charles II sent a
party north to root out the Quakers – one Simon Townsend having his house taken
(the site of the alleged activities of the dissenters). Townsend and several
others were severely punished, with the period of oppression in and around the
town continuing deep into the 1660s.
The record books are peppered with cases
brought against the peace-loving ‘Society of Friends’ groups of this period. At
the very height of the oppression, the Norton group built their first
‘official’ Meeting House on the village green in 1671. Massive fines,
transportation and the like continued for those openly flouting the obligation to
attend ‘national services’ in favour of their own religious gatherings, but the
Quakers hung on until the ‘freer’ days following Charles II’s death in 1685.
Though, in fact, an Act was passed against them as late as 1687 barring them
from entry into many professions, they laid low thereafter, concentrating on
social and industrial endeavours to stunning effect through the Industrial
Revolution and beyond.
More information here.
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