QUAKERS IN NORTH CUMBRIA

The History of Carlisle Quaker Meeting

From 1693 to 1740 Friends met in the Carlisle district as part of the Burgh (Moorhouse) Monthly Meeting, from 1740 to 1964, as part of Carlisle Monthly Meeting and since 1965, Carlisle Preparative Meeting has been part of Carlisle and Holm Monthly Meeting.

Carlisle Castle

Friends in Carlisle were amongst the earliest in the country to possess a meeting house as in 1653 a house in the Abbey Close was acquired for 'the furtherance of truth'. This meeting house was visited by George Fox in 1653 when he came out of prison in Carlisle Castle. Meetings continued to be held with difficulty until 1660. Friends were sometimes locked out of the meeting house and meetings were sometimes held in the Abbey itself. During the reign of Charles the Second the premises were taken from Friends and meetings were subsequently held for almost twenty years in Scotby.

At the end of the 17th Century attempts were made to re-establish the meeting in the city at the home of the Quaker, Isaac Huntingdon. When the numbers attending the meetings increased premises were bought in Fisher Street in 1702, where there were already two Friends' burial grounds.

The new premises adjoined one of the burial grounds and the Sun Inn. They proved too small and in 1710 Quarterly Meeting sanctioned alterations and enlargements to accommodate Yearly Meeting for the Northern Counties in 1711. By 1776 this enlarged meeting house was deemed unsatisfactory and it was sold to the Wesleyan Methodists. Subsequently the site was successively occupied by a church and a hall of the Church of Scotland.

A new meeting house was erected in 1776 on another site in Fisher Street, closer to the city centre and this was enlarged in 1864. The burden of maintaining the meeting house eventually became too heavy for the small meeting and it was sold in 1962 for £7,000, becoming first a shop and currently a cafe.

A site was available at the top of Fisher Street, on the other burial ground which had been purchased by Friends in 1681. On this site, less strips of land bought by the Corporation in 1891 for road widening and by compulsory purchase in 1965 when the inner ring road was built, the present meeting house was opened in 1963. The meeting house has classrooms, kitchen and a meeting room to seat 100. A smaller room for housing the library and used for Children's Meeting, a kitchen and toilets. There is disabled access at the rear. The Meeting House is available for room hire by suitable groups and organisations on application to the Clerk.

Correspondence and enquiries to:

The Clerk,
Friends Meeting House
Fisher Street
Carlisle Cumbria 
CA3 8AX
e-mail contact: 
mickbarber@2etnet.co.uk

LINKS:

MAP OF CARLISLE

CUMBERLAND GENERAL MEETING 
(HOME PAGE)

LINKS TO PREPARATIVE MEETINGS:

PARDSHAW MM
KESWICK COCKERMOUTH  WHITEHAVEN

PARDSHAW 

CARLISLE & HOLM MM
CARLISLE  PENRITH  WIGTON MOSEDALE ALSTON

Thank you for enquiring about Quakers in Carlisle

This page compiled by J E Bagness. Last revised May 17th, 2002