In 1843, Michigan Quarterly Meeting, a part of Genesee Yearly Meeting, eliminated its separate meetings of ministers and elders, thereby placing all its members on equal footing. This action was opposed by important forces in Genesee Yearly Meeting. The issue festered until 1847 when a committee from Genesee Yearly Meeting told the Michigan Meeting that Genesee Yearly Meeting would no longer recognize them if they did not restore their meeting of ministers and elders. Michigan Quarterly Meeting did not do so. At the June 1848 gathering of Genesee Yearly Meeting at the Farmington Meeting House about 20 miles southeast of
Rochester, New York, the clerk repeatedly refused to read the report from Michigan Quarterly Meeting. Two days of heated debate followed over the propriety of this refusal. When it became clear that Genesee Yearly Meeting was severing ties with Michigan Quarterly Meeting, about 200 members walked out in protest and began planning a new Yearly Meeting. It stated that there would be no hierarchy of meetings, as each local group would make its own decisions. There would be no ministers, and no member would be subordinate to another. Men and women would meet together, not separately. Members would not be bound by creed or doctrine. The organization would focus not on theology but on practical goodness. The document said, "The true basis of religious fellowship is not identity of theological belief but unity of heart and oneness of purpose in respect to the great practical duties of life." The organization was not restricted to Quakers. According to historian Christopher Densmore, Congregational Friends, "provided a platform for reformers who were otherwise Quakers,
Unitarians,
Spiritualists and
Free Thinkers." The call implicitly included the native
Haudenosaunee people, who followed their own traditional religious practices and who were working with local Quakers to prevent their forcible removal from that area to lands farther west. The organization met at the Junius Meetinghouse near
Waterloo, New York annually into the 1880s. It soon changed its name to the Progressive Friends, and in 1854 changed it again to Friends of Human Progress to make it clear that it was not a religious sect. Participants included such nationally known social reformers as
Frederick Douglass,
Susan B. Anthony,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
Charles Lenox Remond,
Samuel May,
Amy and Isaac Post, and
Gerritt Smith. Similar organizations were formed afterward in Michigan,
Green Plain, Ohio;
North Collins, New York,
Chester County, Pennsylvania and several other places. The June 1848 separation that led to the formation of the Congregational Friends played an important role in initiating the
first women's rights convention, held a month later in
Seneca Falls, New York, four miles east of Waterloo. Four of the five women who organized that convention were part of the new group of progressive Quakers. Thomas M'Clintock, the primary author of its "Basis of Religious Association," presided over the second evening session of the convention. At least twenty-three of the one hundred signers of the convention's
Declaration of Sentiments were from the Congregational Friends, nineteen of them from the Junius meeting near Waterloo.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a key organizer of the Seneca Falls convention who later became a national leader of the
women's rights movement, spoke on women's rights at the founding meeting of the Congregational Friends. By the 1850s, she had become an active member.
Susan B. Anthony, who later became the national leader the
women's suffrage movement, served as clerk of the organization in 1857.
Frederick Douglass, a leading
abolitionist who was formerly enslaved, attended several meetings as well, including those in June 1861 and 1866, when Friends of Human Progress discussed how to react to the outbreak of the Civil War and its aftermath. According to the
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Douglass spoke with "unrivaled eloquence" at the latter meeting in favor of a resolution for the enfranchisement of Black men and also one that said the "grand and fundamental idea" of equality and justice "will not have been practically carried out till woman, equally with man, shall have secured to her the power to cast her ballot." The organization asserted that people had the same capabilities regardless of sex or race, declaring in 1853 that "every member of the human family, without regard to color or sex, possess potentially the same faculties and powers, capable of like cultivation and development and consequently has the same rights, interests and destiny." According to historian Nancy A. Hewitt, members of this organization “may have been unique among their contemporaries, including other activists and other Quakers, in extending this belief in human equality across the color line.” ==Pennsylvania Yearly Meeting of Progressive Friends (Longwood, PA)==