Twelfth Street Meeting House Explained

Twelfth Street Meeting House
Alternate Names:Meeting House at George School
Building Type:Quaker meeting house
Architectural Style:Federal
Ren Architect:Charles S. Hough (1972–1974)
Location Country:United States
Completion Date:1812–1813
Relocated Date:1972–1974
Material:Brick, laid in Flemish bond
Roof:48feet

Twelfth Street Meeting House was a Quaker meeting house in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was built on the west side of 12th Street, south of Market Street, 1812–1813, incorporating architectural elements from Philadelphia's Greater Meeting House (1755).

The building was dismantled and relocated to Newtown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1972, and reconstructed, 1973–1974. Since then it has served as the meeting house for George School.

History

Greater Meeting House

The Philadelphia Greater Meeting House was built in 1755 at the southwest corner of 2nd and Market Streets.[1] Constructed by carpenter Abraham Carlisle and his apprentice, Isaac Coates, the square brick building – 57-ft (17.4-m) per side – was unusually large for the American Colonies. Its six triangular roof trusses – 58feetx20feetft (xft) – were made of pine and held together with wooden pegs rather than nails.

As Philadelphia grew as a commercial city, the area near the waterfront became too noisy for the quiet contemplation of Quaker worship and inconvenient for many members of the meeting. The land on which the Greater Meeting House stood was sold in 1809, with the proceeds to go toward building a meeting house further west.[2]

12th Street

A plot of land on South 12th Street – 142by – was purchased in 1810 for $11,000.[3] Carpenter John D. Smith dismantled the old building.[4] Its roof trusses, which dictated the width of the new building, were unpegged and transported in pieces. Other architectural elements such as windows, doors and columns were salvaged and reused.[5] The new building was longer than the old – 91feet, rather than 57feet.[3] Smith built two additional roof trusses of tulip poplar, and increased the spacing between all of them. The two-story main meeting room replicated the dimensions of the Greater Meeting House's square interior, and at least some of its old benches were reused.[3] The new building's extension featured a one-story women's meeting room, separated from the main meeting room by a movable partition, and a second floor room. Construction of the Twelfth Street Meeting House was completed in April 1813, at a cost of $21,410.46.[3]

In 1827 a schism occurred in American Quakerism, which divided into Orthodox and Hicksite factions. Twelfth Street Meeting remained a stronghold for Orthodox Friends.

From 1874 to 1925, the meeting house was used for daily meeting by the adjacent William Penn Charter School, a Quaker private school for boys at the southwest corner of 12th and Market Streets. The school moved to a suburban campus in 1925, and its school building was demolished to build the PSFS Building (1930).

The schism in American Quakerism was formally healed in 1955.[6] The following year, the formerly-Orthodox Twelfth Street Meeting and the formerly-Hicksite Race Street Meeting merged to form the Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting. The two bodies consolidated at the Race Street Meeting House, making the 12th Street building superfluous.[7] In September 1969, CPMM announced an agreement to sell the property to PSFS for $810,000.[8]

Friends Institute and AFSC

The Friends Institute, a one-story social hall, was built southwest of the meeting house in 1892.[3] A second story was added in 1909, to provide offices and lodging rooms for visitors.[9]

In April 1917, days after the United States declared war on Germany and entered World War I, a group of Quakers met at the Twelfth Street Meeting House to discuss the impending military draft.[10] They formed the American Friends Service Committee to negotiate alternative service – rather than imprisonment – for conscientious objectors to the war.[10] AFSC first had its headquarters in the Friends Institute, but soon expanded into the former women's meeting room. The main meeting room's balcony was divided into offices for AFSC in 1936,[3] and occupied until 1960, when the organization moved to the Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting.[11] AFSC shared in the 1947 Nobel Peace Prize, and continues to work for peace and social justice in the United States and around the world.

The Friends Institute building was demolished in 1972.

Relocation

The Twelfth Street Meeting House embodied more than 200 years of Philadelphia Quaker history, and there was an intense desire to find a way to preserve the building. In the 1930s, a floor joist had been discovered with the initials "AC + IC" and the date "1755" spelled out in nailheads.[12] This was presumed to have been the Greater Meeting House's builders, Abraham Carlisle and Isaac Coates, "signing" their work.[3]

The Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting delayed finalizing the sale to PSFS for two years, hoping to find a donor who would relocate the building.[8] Several non-profits expressed interest, but withdrew after examining the high cost of reconstruction. To make the deal more attractive, CPMM committed to paying the cost of the building's dismantling and transportation.[13] The sale of the property to PSFS was finalized on October 10, 1971, but the fate of the meeting house remained unresolved.[8] The William Penn Charter School – which had used the building for daily meeting for more than 50 years – worked diligently to raise funds to relocate the meeting house to its campus in Germantown, but finally was forced to give up its bid at the end of November.[8] In December, George School announced that an anonymous donor had committed to paying for the building's reconstruction on its campus in Bucks County.[8] Following the donors' deaths, it was revealed that they had been a married couple, F. Palin Spruance and Helen Sensenderfer Spruance.[14] The cost of dismantling and transporting the pieces of the building was $60,000.[15] The cost of reconstruction has never been disclosed, but was estimated at up to half-a-million dollars.[8]

Architect Charles Hough, of the firm Hayes & Hough, supervised the dismantling of the building in Summer 1972. In addition to the structural and architectural elements, between 50% and 75% of its bricks were salvaged and reused.[8] The pieces of the building were numbered, transported to the George School campus, and reconstructed beginning in Spring 1973.

Reconstruction

Hough reconstructed the exterior to look as it had in 1813. He removed a 20th-century addition that contained bathrooms and a caretaker's apartment, along with anachronisms such as a Colonial Revival triple window added to the women's meeting room. He used modern materials – cinderblock, concrete, steel – for structure; faced the building with original bricks laid in Flemish bond; and reinstalled the marble steps, exterior woodwork, windows and doors. The 1755 and 1813 buildings had been oriented east-west; the reconstructed building was oriented north-south.

Hough used the interior to evoke both of the ancestor buildings. At the south end, he created a great room, 54abbr=onNaNabbr=on on each side – the interior dimensions of the 1755 Greater Meeting House – and a soaring 45abbr=onNaNabbr=on tall. Dramatically, he left the original roof trusses exposed, high overhead. At the north end, he represented the length of the 12th Street building's extension with a 1-story "activities room." A continuous line of wainscoting around the interior visually united the two spaces. He turned a side entrance to the women's meeting room into the building's main entrance, and inserted a staircase at its northwest corner. This led up to a second floor balcony overlooking the great room, or led down to a basement with bathrooms and utilities. At the northeast corner, he inserted a kitchenette and closets. Benches, railings, waincoting and other interior woodwork were refinished and reused. Hough's attention to detail extended to attaching the reused floorboards with replicas of the 1813 iron nails, forged by a local blacksmith. Along the north wall, he installed the ministers' gallery and elders' bench – a raised platform traditionally reserved for visiting ministers and persons of authority. In a crowning gesture, above the gallery/bench he mounted the 1755 floor joist "signed" by the meeting house's original builders, Abraham Carlisle and Isaac Coates.[16]

The Philadelphia Chapter of the American Institute of Architects recognized Hough's work on the meeting house with a 1975 award for excellence.[16] He was a lifelong Quaker, and a 1944 graduate of George School. In his 2016 obituary, his family recalled that relocating the meeting house had been the "proudest moment" of his career.[15]

The restored meeting house was re-dedicated September 24, 1974.[8] Now shared with Newtown Friends School, the building continues to be used for daily meeting, lectures, concerts, and special events.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Philadelphia Meeting Houses, "High Street Meeting," from Haverford College.
  2. Cadbury, p. 60.
  3. Historic American Buildings Survey, "12th St. Meeting House – Brief History," from HABS.
  4. https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/ar_display_projects.cfm/24139 "John D. Smith,"
  5. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/master/pnp/habshaer/pa/pa1400/pa1426/data/pa1426cap.pdf 12th St. Meeting House – Index to Photographs (PDF).
  6. Jared Taber and Laura Smoot, The Hicksite–Orthodox Reunification, from Philadelphia Yearly Meeting.
  7. https://www.quakercloud.org/cloud/central-philadelphia-monthly-meeting/pages/cpmm-history History of CPMM
  8. http://markfranek.wordpress.com/2009/05/20/who-moved-th-meetinghouse/ Mark Franek, "Who Moved the Twelfth Street Meetinghouse?"
  9. https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/pj_display_alldates.cfm/31760 Twelfth Street Friends Meetinghouse – Chronology
  10. Jack Sutters, "Origin of AFSC," from American Friends Service Committee.
  11. https://www.philadelphiabuildings.org/pab/app/image_gallery.cfm/31760 Twelfth Street Friends Meetinghouse – New Offices
  12. Albert H. Savery, Account of the 125th Anniversary of the Twelfth Street Meeting House (1939).
  13. http://www.georgeschool.org/about-george-school/our-history/buildings-places/meetinghouse/meetinghouse-move/ "An Old Green Building Story,"
  14. http://www.georgeschool.org/support-george-school/reasons-to-give/early-benefactors/the-spruance-and-alden-families/ The Spruance and Alden Families
  15. http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/20160320_Charles_Hough__architect__community_volunteer.html Obituary: "Charles Hough, architect, community volunteer,"
  16. Charles Hough, "It's all about the trusses," April 2008 lecture, from George School.