Port Townsend Friends Meeting has a new home at 1841 Sheridan St. — Port Townsend Friends Meeting

Port Townsend Friends Meeting has a new home at 1841 Sheridan St. — Port Townsend Friends Meeting

Port Townsend Friends Meeting buys a home after outpouring of support

PORT TOWNSEND — After gathering in rented space for more than a dozen years, Port Townsend Friends moved quickly to get its first real home.

Much of the $250,000 needed to buy the former Church of Christ building at 1841 Sheridan St., was pledged within a week of the news that the structure was for sale, said Caroline Wildflower, clerk of the Meetinghouse Committee for the Port Townsend Friends Meeting.

“In a period of less than a week, we had pledges and donations for over half of the building’s cost and potential lenders queued up,” she said, adding that “the building absolutely looked like a traditional meetinghouse and was in excellent condition.”

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People also stepped up to offer funds to maintain the meeting house, she added.

“It was truly spirit moving among us,” she said.

The group — made up of 25 members and another 25 involved “in one way or another” — had met at the Port Townsend Community Center for more than a dozen years, announcing its presence with a sandwich board out front, Wildflower said.

Port Townsend Friends Meeting — officially members of the Religious Society of Friends but often known as Quakers — kept its belongings in a rolling cart, two lockers in the community center and spread out among members in the area, Wildflower said.

Now, it has 2,280 square feet, a main worship room with a 75-person capacity and four additional rooms, earmarked as spaces for a children’s program, a library, an office and eventually a kitchen.

The building needs no major renovations, Wildflower said, but a banner announcing the group will be replaced by a permanent sign and, along with adding a kitchen, the group is considering installing large windows.

Members had been contemplating purchasing a meetinghouse for nearly a decade, Wildflower said.

During that time, about $37,000 had been collected in a meetinghouse fund.

Soon after hearing on June 2 that the building was available, pledges came in — several for $20,000 and one for $50,000 — while one couple offered a loan.

The sale closed Aug. 14, and the group had its first meeting — an unusual evening meeting to bless the new place — on Aug. 17.

Said Cathy Thomas, treasurer of Port Townsend Friends Meeting: “I am amazed at how quickly things came together.

“We are a small group that had been saving large and small donations for years in order to do this.

“Then I saw an incredible amount of faith and generosity surface fast enough to come up with the rest in donations and one significant loan.”

The Friends gather at 9:30 a.m. every Sunday, with silent worship from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.

“It is peaceful place, “ said Clint Weimeister, clerk of the meeting.

“It has always been a place of peace, and we are delighted to continue a spiritual light here.”

For children’s programs, phone ahead at 360-379-5376. For more information, visit www.PTQuaker.org.

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