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First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis
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First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis : ウィキペディア英語版
First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis

First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis is a Unitarian Universalist
congregation located at 900 Mount Curve, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55403 USA
==History==
In the 1870s, the Minneapolis chapter of the National Liberal League began meeting to discuss the ideas of geologist Charles Lyell and naturalist Charles Darwin. Upon hearing visiting Unitarian minister Henry Martyn Simmons (1841-1905) lecture, eighteen members of the Liberal League voted to incorporate as a Unitarian congregation on November 18, 1881
so that Simmons would join them in Minneapolis.


The articles of incorporation defined the Society's purpose as "to form an Association
where people without regard to theological differences may unite for
mutual helpfulness in intellectual, moral, and religious culture, and
humane work."

The sermons of Rev. Simmons on evolution, science, and ethics drew
large crowds. Simmons was a vocal opponent of the U.S. invasion of the
Philippines and the congregation was instrumental in convincing the
state of Minnesota to withdraw its troops from the war.


The Society's first building, designed by noted architect
Leroy Buffington, was dedicated in June 1887.

The Society has always attracted progressive social activists.
Congregants set up literacy programs for working children
and made clothes for the needy. The Women's Alliance of the
congregation funded a free delivery room for unwed mothers at the
Maternity Hospital of physician and social reformer Martha Ripley.
Two congregants, Maud Conkey Stockwell and Clara Ueland, served as
president of the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association from
1901-1919. After voting rights had been achieved, the organization
became the Minnesota League of Women Voters, with Clara Ueland as its
first president.

Beginning in 1906, the congregation sponsored the Saturday Lunch Club,
often called the "university for progressive ideas." Lecturers
included Clarence Darrow, John Haynes Holmes, Minnesota
governor Floyd B. Olson, and Louis Brandeis.
In 1916, the Society called John H. Dietrich as its minister. Dietrich
is considered the father of "Religious Humanism," a secularization of
the Sunday morning liturgical experience.

Dietrich's talks proved so
popular that services were moved to the Garrick Theater in downtown
Minneapolis and later to another large downtown theater, the Shubert,
to accommodate the audiences that regularly exceeded 1,000. Dietrich's
talks were broadcast on radio and published as pamphlets.

In 1917, Dietrich met Curtis W. Reese, another midwestern Unitarian
minister who was advancing similar humanistic ideals. They formed the
core of a growing number of Humanist ministers among Unitarian clergy.
This movement led to the publication of
A Humanist Manifesto in 1933.
One of the principal authors of Manifesto I was Rev. Raymond Bragg, who
would succeed John Dietrich as minister of the Society.
The Society outgrew its Harmon Place building and built the Unitarian
Center at 1526 Harmon Place in 1926. Sunday assemblies were still held
in downtown theaters.

In 1929, the Society's Women's Alliance formed the
American Birth Control League after sponsoring a lecture by
Margaret Sanger. In 1930, the League opened the first birth control
clinic in the state, which later became Planned Parenthood of
Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
During the Great Depression the Society was instrumental in forming the
Humanist Credit Union, which later became part of the Group Health Plan,
Inc. and eventually Group Health in 1957 before becoming HealthPartners, Inc.,
today the nation's largest health co-op.
The Society hosted the Minneapolis Theatre Union which, in
collaboration with the Society's own acting group, the Assembly
Players, produced plays concerning union organizing and liberal causes
of the day. For example, the group raised money for the Scottsboro
Defense Fund.

In the 1940s, when cremation was not easily available, members formed
the Minnesota chapter of Funeral Consumers Alliance.
In 1951, the Society moved into its present building at 900 Mount Curve
Avenue in urban Minneapolis. Designed by the architectural firm of
Thorshov and Cerny, the building reflects the humanist values of the
congregation in its minimalist design and absence of religious
symbols.

The progressive activism of the Society continued.
From 1966 through 1978, the Society's minister, Robert Lehman, offered
draft counseling and facilitated support groups for gay men. Public
assembly of gay people was illegal in the state at the time.

Minister Khoren Arisian participated in the formation of the North
American Committee for Humanism and the establishment of the Humanist
Institute, a national training center for humanist leadership. Rev.
Arisian was a signer of Humanist Manifesto II.
First Unitarian Society remains a humanist congregation and is a
focal point for humanist, freethought, and atheist groups in the Twin
Cities.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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