Informazioni sulla fonte

Ancestry.com. Indiana, Stati Uniti, Selezione di elenchi delle riunioni dei Quaccheri, 1836-1921 [database online]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. This collection was indexed by Ancestry World Archives Project contributors.
Dati originali: Quaker Meeting Directories. Friends Historical Library, Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana.

 Indiana, Stati Uniti, Selezione di elenchi delle riunioni dei Quaccheri, 1836-1921

Questa raccolta include gli elenchi delle riunioni dei Quaccheri in Indiana. Gli elenchi riportano i nomi e spesso gli indirizzi dei membri partecipanti alle riunioni. Possono inoltre fornire gli eventuali incarichi (ad esempio, ministro, supervisore, presbitero, amministratore fiduciario, impiegato, ecc.) assunti durante la riunione. Alcuni elenchi riportano anche i membri del comitato. Gli elenchi di questa raccolta sono tratti dalle riunioni mensili e trimestrali di Indianapolis (Indianapolis, contea di Marion), Whitewater (Richmond, contea di Wayne), Walnut Ridge (Carthage, contea di Rush) e Knightstown (Knightstown, contea di Henry) e dalla riunione annuale dell’Indiana del 1889.

The roots of Quakerism in America date back to the mid-17th century, and by the early 19th century, the Society of Friends had established meetings in Indiana. This collection includes directories from Quaker meetings in Indiana.

The directories include names, and often street addresses, of meeting members. Additionally they can provide any posts (e.g., ministers, overseers, elders, trustees, clerks, etc.) members held in the meeting. Some directories also list committee members.

Directories in this collection are from monthly and quarterly meetings at Indianapolis (Indianapolis, Marion Co.), Whitewater (Richmond, Wayne Co.), Walnut Ridge (Carthage, Rush Co.), and Knightstown (Knightstown, Henry Co.), as well as the yearly meeting for Indiana, 1889.

Historical Background

The Society of Friends was an important religious group from the seventeenth century onward in North America. They spread throughout New England and into New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, the Carolinas, Tennessee, Virginia, Ohio, and Indiana. The Quakers are organized into meetings designated for worship (First Day Meetings), congregational business (monthly meetings), meetings that combine a group of congregations from a specific area that come together for worship and business (quarterly meetings), and meetings that have jurisdiction over a wide geographical area (yearly meetings). Quakers usually chose not to register marriages in civil records prior to the close of the nineteenth century, and most Quakers did not use tombstones until the mid-nineteenth century. These omissions add importance to the consistent and thorough record-keeping found in Quaker meeting records, which record a family’s births, deaths, and marriages. Certificates of removal were issued when a Quaker moved from one meeting to another and also appear in the monthly meeting minutes of both the transferring and receiving congregations.

[Historical excerpt from Elizabeth Crabtree Wells. “Church Records.” In Loretto Dennis Szucs and Sandra Hargreaves Luebking, eds. The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy. Provo, UT: Ancestry Publishing, 2006.]